Abstract

In experiment, two optical and pressure-based methods are frequently used to evaluate laminar burning velocity of a combustible mixture. In the currently reported work, the pressure-based method was utilized to find the laminar burning velocity using the measurement of pressure variations during the combustion process in a spherical bomb and analyzing them through a multi-zone quasi-dimensional model. To check the results of the method, isooctane–air mixtures were used at equivalence ratios of 0.85 and 1.0 and initial pressures of 95 and 150kPa with 343K initial temperature. The time history of the bomb pressure during the combustion event, initial pressure and temperature, fuel type, and equivalence ratio were applied as input to a Fortran program written by the author based on the multi-zone combustion model; and, flame radius-time, flame speed, and laminar burning velocity at different pressures and temperatures were evaluated assuming spherical flame growth. The obtained results were compared with those of some other researchers and a reasonable agreement was observed. The wall effect on the laminar burning velocity at the end of the combustion process was clearly highlighted and a reliable range of burning velocity was distinguished. The results showed that the evaluated laminar burning velocity was not reliable at the late part of the combustion process due to possible local contact of flame front and the bomb wall, the wall effect on the reacting species, flow to small crevices, and the boundary layer effect.

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