Abstract

In this study, detonation limits in very small diameter tubes are investigated to further the understanding of the near-limit detonation phenomenon. Three small diameter circular tubes of 1.8, 6.3, and 9.5 mm inner diameters, of 3 m length, were used to permit the near-limit detonations to be observed over long distances of 300 to 1500 tube diameters. Mixtures with high argon dilution (stable) and without dilution (unstable) are used for the experiments. For stable mixtures highly diluted with argon for which instabilities are not important and where failure is due to losses only, the limit obtained experimentally appears well to be in good agreement in comparison to that computed by the quasi-steady ZND theory with flow divergence or curvature term modeling the boundary layer effects. For unstable detonations it is suggested that suppression of the instabilities of the cellular detonation due to boundary conditions is responsible for the failure of the detonation wave. Different near-limit propagation regimes are also observed, including the spinning and galloping mode. Based on the present experimental results, an attempt is made to study an operational criterion for the propagation limits of stable and unstable detonations.

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