Molecular beam mass spectrometer sampling has been used to probe the chemistry of a flat lean CH4-O2-Ar flame at 4.0 kPa which is cooled by a gold and a platinum surface whose temperature is held at 373K. The gold surface is chemically inert, and its effect on the flame should be limited to cooling
Combutational studies of end-wall flame quenching at low pressure: The effects of heterogeneous radical recombination and crevices
โ Scribed by Thompson M. Sloane; Andrew Y. Schoene
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 865 KB
- Volume
- 49
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0010-2180
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โฆ Synopsis
A computational study of the effect of heterogeneous radical destruction and crevices on end-wall flame quenching in a lean CH4-O2-Ar mixture at low pressure has been performed. The unsteady conservation edlaations for a chemically reacting multicomponent gas have been solved with the commercially available partial differential equation solver package PDEPACK. Heterogeneous radical destruction at a cooled surface was found to have a minor effect on flame quenching compared to homogeneous destruction in the cooled flame gases near the surface. These results are in qualitative agreement with experiments performed in a side-wall geometry. Cooled crevices, however, had a much greater effect on the postquench oxidation of the fuel. Whereas the fuel layer left after quenching near a fiat wall burns up more rapidly as the pressure is increased, unburned fuel left in a crevice after quenching burns up more slowly as the pressure is increased. This reaffirms the potential importance of crevices as sources of unburned hydrocarbons in an engine.
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