Abstract

In a thermodiffusively unstable premixed hydrogen flame, cellular flame structures exist due to the strong differential diffusion of hydrogen featuring wide ranges of curvature and strain rate. NOx formation pathways are directly affected by the complex cellular flame structures as different species have different sensitivities to differential diffusion effects and curvature. In this work, the NOx formation characteristics of a thermodiffusively unstable laminar premixed hydrogen flame are investigated. At first, the NOx formation characteristics in the tangential and normal directions of the flame front are analyzed, focusing on the effects of curvature. Then, reaction path analyses are conducted to identify the relevant pathways and elementary reactions that pre-dominantly contribute to the formation of NOx pollutants. To investigate the effects of curvature on NOx formation, the reaction fluxes and the elementary reaction rates are calculated by conditioning on the curvature value. Finally, the performance of a flamelet model in predicting the NOx species in the thermodiffusively unstable premixed hydrogen flame is evaluated through an a priori analysis. The results show that curvature directly affects NOx formation, particularly the dominant NNH and N2O reaction pathways while the contribution of the thermal-NO pathway is found to be overall negligible. The NOx species are mainly formed in positively-curved flame segments where the flamelet model gives good predictions, while discrepancies with respect to the model exist in the negatively-curved flame regions. The reason for this is clarified through a chemical timescale analysis and a conditional reaction path analysis.

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