Abstract
As a potential zero-carbon fuel for internal combustion engine to mitigate the greenhouse gas emission, ammonia’s unique flash boiling spray behaviors have not been well understood. In this study, the macroscopic and the microscopic characteristics of the liquid ammonia spray at the flare and transition flash boiling regions were experimentally investigated under different pressure ratios (RP, the ambient over the saturated pressure) and ambient temperatures. The spray macroscopic morphologies captured from the high-speed camera in the flare flash boiling region (RP ≤ 0.47) show that the spray expands significantly in radial direction while that in the transition flash boiling region (0.47 < RP ≤ 1.06) is more contracted in the penetration direction. Additionally, in flare flash boiling region, spray tip penetration and velocity increases generally with the increase of RP, while that in the transition flash boiling region in versus. Furthermore, the microscopic droplet statistics clearly demonstrate show that the most probable droplet diameter moves to a larger value with the increase of RP. The peak probability of droplet size and the droplet number density decreases at larger RP cases, resulting in a more uniformly distributed droplet sizes and an increased Sauter Mean Diameter. Finally, the ambient temperature show limited influence on the macroscopic spray penetration behaviors or the microscopic droplet size distribution, but evaporation is significantly enhanced since at highest ambient temperature, there are minimized droplet number density in some of the test locations.
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