Abstract

Liquid transportation fuels are composed of a wide range of molecular structures and weights, therefore exhibiting a relatively large distillation temperature range. When fuel chemical properties change along with the distillation temperature curve, preferential vaporization effects could play a role in near-limit combustion behaviors. The objective of this study is to experimentally evaluate the role of preferential vaporization on flame flashback behaviors. A unique spray burner is developed to control the extent of fuel spray vaporization by adjusting flow rates and/or the spray injection location from the burner exit. Spray characteristics are comprehensively determined using Phase Doppler Particle Analyzer. Two binary component mixtures are formulated (n-octane/iso-cetane and iso-octane/n-hexadecane) to exhibit common combustion behaviors in the fully vaporized condition but have considerably different preferential vaporization characteristics. Identical flashback behaviors of two mixtures are observed for fully pre-vaporized conditions by setting the burner temperature at 700 K, including both propagation- and ignition-driven flashback behaviors. Partially vaporized conditions are investigated at two global equivalence ratios (1.0 and 1.4) by setting the burner temperature at 450 K. The flashback behaviors for both global equivalence ratio conditions are found to be affected by the preferential vaporization characteristics represented by laminar flame speeds of the vaporized fuel mixture composition. The relative significance of local flow perturbation induced by instantaneous fuel droplet evaporation near the flame surface has been also investigated by analyzing planar laser-induced fluorescence images, as well as considering the changes of Markstein length with the extent of fuel vaporization. Finally, the relative contributions of local laminar flame speed representing local fuel vapor deposit, local flow perturbation, and preferential vaporization are evaluated through feature sensitivity analyses.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call