Abstract
This work aims to characterize the effects of pulse repetition rate (PRR) and flow speed on dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasma pulse-to-pulse coupling and its ability to ignite methane-air flows. Experiments are performed on a homemade DBD flow reactor with 5 mm discharge gap. Pressure and equivalence ratio are kept constant at 700 mbar and 0.6. First, we perform high-speed intensified imaging to visualize pulse-to-pulse plasma behavior and ignition kernel development. In air flows, plasma morphology changes from multiple weak filaments to a few stronger filaments indicating plasma pulse-to-pulse coupling. This leads to plasma energy addition in nearly the same gas volume as the previous discharge. The study performed in methane-air flows highlights the importance of plasma pulse-to-pulse coupling for ignition. We find a critical PRR and a minimum number of pulses required to achieve a strong enough coupling to develop a successful ignition kernel. Ignition probability and kernel growth are also evaluated for various conditions. Finally, plasma pulse-to-pulse coupling is quantified by measuring the plasma parameters such as gas temperature and reduced electric field from an optical emission spectroscopy.
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