Abstract
Ammonia is a highly promising alternative fuel, and blending it with hydrogen can mitigate its poor combustion performance. However, the combustion mechanism of ammonia-hydrogen mixtures requires further validation through measurements of laminar burning velocity, particularly under high-pressure conditions relevant to practical combustors. Experimental data at high initial pressures (>1.0 MPa) are notably scarce. In this study, experiments were conducted using an outwardly propagating spherical flame in a high-pressure, high-temperature, constant-volume combustion chamber to determine the laminar burning velocities of ammonia-hydrogen blends at elevated initial pressures. The effects of different equivalence ratios (0.6 ∼ 1.4), volumetric hydrogen ratios (0.1 ∼ 0.6), and initial pressures (0.1 ∼ 2.5 MPa) were evaluated. Chemical kinetics of ammonia and hydrogen combustion was investigated at high pressures. The experimental results were compared with the simulation results under a wide range of conditions using several existing mechanisms to evaluate their applicability. The results show that the laminar burning velocity increases first and then decreases as the equivalence ratio (ϕ) increases and reaches a maximum value around ϕ of 1.1. The laminar burning velocity increases non-linearly with the volumetric hydrogen ratio, with more pronounced acceleration at higher hydrogen ratios. In contrast, the laminar burning velocity decreases non-linearly with the increasing initial pressure, and this reduction becomes progressively slower as the initial pressure rises. The predictive performance of the mechanisms by Okafor et al. and Gotama et al. is relatively satisfactory under certain conditions, but further optimization based on experimental data is necessary. Additionally, reaction pathway analysis of ammonia-hydrogen combustion indicates that introducing hydrogen increases the concentration of active radicals such as OH, O, and H, thereby enhancing ammonia combustion. Sensitivity analysis of the laminar burning velocity identified the critical elementary reactions across varying pressures, providing strong support for optimizing ammonia-hydrogen chemical kinetics models and developing simulation models for practical combustion systems.
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