Abstract

This study reports the accurate laminar burning velocity, turbulent burning velocity and its correlations of ammonia/methane/air propagating spherical flames. The experiments were carried out on a medium-scale, fan-stirred cylindrical combustion chamber with ammonia molar content varying from 20% to 60% and the initial pressure up to 3 bar. The turbulent burning velocity decreases with the ammonia content due to the weakening effect of the laminar burning velocity under all turbulence intensities and pressures studied. Since the weakening of flame chemistry is dominated by the enhancement of turbulence eddies, the normalized turbulent burning velocity increases with the ammonia content. The turbulent expanding flame of ammonia/methane/air is self-similar under different ammonia content. This self-similar propagation follows the one-half power-law correlation between the normalized turbulent burning velocity, ST/SL, and the turbulent flame Reynolds number, which is quantitatively consistent with that of unity Lewis number methane/air flames (Chaudhuri 2012). The pressure dependence of turbulent burning velocity can be represented roughly as a 0.4 power law of ST/SL and (u′/SL)(P/P0). However, there is a quantitative gap between the pre-exponential factor of the present experimental data and the literature data based on this correlation, which could attribute to the difference in the turbulence eddy scales of different experimental apparatus. The integral length scale characterized the largest turbulence eddies is introduced to consider the turbulent length scale effect. A modified general correlation ST/SL∼(LI/L0)0.5[(u′/SL)(P/P0)]0.41 with the consideration of the integral length scale effect is obtained, which is able to predict a variety of spherical flame data regardless of temperatures, pressures, and fuel types. In addition, it is verified that turbulent burning velocity of ammonia flame could be expressed by the correlation of Karlovitz and Damköhler numbers: ST/SL∼Ka·Da=ReT,flow0.5. It can be seen that ammonia has similar turbulent combustion characteristics as hydrocarbon fuel. These findings indicate that it is feasible to simulate and optimize ammonia combustors utilizing previous turbulent burning velocity correlations based on hydrocarbon fuel.

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