The fate of arsenic in a laminar diffusion flame
β Scribed by Scott Chesworth; Gosu Yang; Daniel P.Y. Chang; A.Daniel Jones; Peter B. Kelly; Ian M. Kennedy
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 643 KB
- Volume
- 98
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0010-2180
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
An arsenic compound (cacodylic acid) has been added to laminar diffusion flames burning in a co-flowing stream of air. Two fuels were used viz. ethene (C2H 4) and a mixture of hydrogen and nitrogen. Samples of aerosols and gaseous species were collected within the flames and above the flames with filters and sorbent tubes. The hydrogen flame showed the conversion of arsenite to arsenate with increased residence time through the flame. The conversion of arsenite to arsenate in the ethene flames was inhibited by the emission of soot, which apparently competed with the arsenic for oxygen in the postflame gas. Arsenic was not found to be incorporated into soot particles. The carbon and arsenic were present in the postflame gases as two distinct aerosol phases. The addition of arsenic did not have a significant effect on the formation and oxidation of soot. The addition of arsenic did not lead to the production of organoarsenic species; only common polycyclic aromatics were found in the sooting flames.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The temperature field of aluminum, laminar diffusion, dust flames (LDDF) has been studied using holographic interferometry. Radial temperature profiles of LDDF have been determined at twelve crosssection heights above the dust burner. The widths of the burning and preheating zones and the burning te
Laminar diffusion flames of methane were burned on small tubes. Flow velocity, temperature and composition were measured over a small region near the flame base. The central stream of methane entrained air below and through the flame, cooling the flame base to about 1500Β°C but increasing the reactan
A simple model has been developed for the prediction of soot volume fractions in a laminar diffusion flame. Measurements and computations of a counterftow flame have been used to evaluate the correlation between soot surface growth rates and the mixture fraction or fuel atom mass fraction. An averag