Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 5 of 5
Journal Article

Ignition Characteristics of Ethane and Its Roles in Natural Gas for HCCI Engine Operation

2015-04-14
2015-01-0811
The ignition characteristics of each component of natural gas and the chemical kinetic factors determining those characteristics were investigated using detailed chemical kinetic calculations. Ethane (C2H6) showed a relatively short ignition delay time with high initial temperature; the heat release profile was slow in the early stage of the ignition process and rapid during the late stage. Furthermore, the ignition delay time of C2H6 showed very low dependence on O2 concentration. In the ignition process of C2H6, HO2 is generated effectively by several reaction paths, and H2O2 is generated from HO2 and accumulated with a higher concentration, which promotes the OH formation rate of H2O2 (+ M) = OH + OH (+ M). The ignition characteristics for C2H6 can be explained by H2O2 decomposition governing OH formation at any initial temperature.
Technical Paper

Role of Heat Accumulation by Reaction Loop Initiated by H2O2 Decomposition for Thermal Ignition

2007-04-16
2007-01-0908
Detailed reaction path analyses of DME (dimethyl ether, CH3OCH3) and n-heptane (n-C7H16) were performed computationally with the “contribution matrix” showing the contribution ratios of important elementary reactions to formation or removal of every species or heat release at transient temperatures. It was found that the “H2O2 reaction loop” defined by the authors plays an important role in the initiation of thermal ignition. This is a reaction loop composed of four reactions, H2O2 + M → 2OH + M, OH + CH2O → HCO + H2O, HCO + O2 → HO2 + CO and 2HO2 → H2O2 + O2. The overall reaction is 2CH2O + O2 → 2H2O + 2CO + 473 kJ. This loop begins to be active, when the OH formation by H2O2 + M → 2OH + M becomes dominant against those by cool-flame reactions with NTC's (negative temperature coefficient) at about 950 K. The loop releases a significant amount of heat without consuming H2O2.
Technical Paper

Reduction of Reaction Mechanism for n-Tridecane Based on Knowledge of Detailed Reaction Paths

2016-10-17
2016-01-2238
n-Tridecane is a low boiling point component of gas oil, and has been used as a single-component fuel for diesel spray and combustion experiments. However, no reduced chemical kinetic mechanisms for n-tridecane have been presented for three-dimensional modeling. A detailed mechanism developed by KUCRS (Knowledge-basing Utilities for Complex Reaction Systems), contains 1493 chemical species and 3641 reactions. Reaction paths during ignition process for n-tridecane in air computed using the detailed mechanism, were analyzed with the equivalence ratio of 0.75 and the initial temperatures of 650 K, 850 K, and 1100 K, which are located in the cool-flame dominant, negative-temperature coefficient, and blue-flame dominant regions, respectively.
Technical Paper

Artificial Control of Diesel Spray and Flame Feature by using Dual-component Fuel

2015-09-01
2015-01-1916
Fuel design approach has been proposed as the control technique of spray and combustion processes in diesel engine to improve thermal efficiency and reduce exhaust emissions. In order to kwow if this approach is capable of controlling spray flame structure and interaction between the flame and a combustion chamber wall, the present study investigated ignition and flame characteristics of dual-component fuels, while varying mixing fraction, fuel temperature and ambient conditions. Those characteristics were evaluated through chemiluminescence photography and luminous flame photography. OH radical images and visible luminous flame images were analyzed to reveal flame shape aspect ratio and its fractal dimension.
Technical Paper

Heat Release Rate and Cylinder Gas Pressure Oscillation in Low and High Speed Knock

2015-09-01
2015-01-1880
One of the authors has proposed to use the decay rate of EHRR, the effective heat release rate, d2Q/dθ2 as an index for the rapid local combustion [1]. In this study, EHRR profiles and the cylinder gas pressure oscillations of the low and high speed knock are analyzed by using this index. A delayed rapid local combustion, such as an autoignition with small burned mass fraction can be detected. In the cases of the low speed knock, it has been agreed that a rapid local combustion is an autoignition. Although whether the cylinder gas oscillation is provoked by an auto ignition in a certain cycle or not is an irregular phenomenon, the auto ignition takes place in almost all of the cycles in the knocking condition. Mixture mass fraction burned by an auto ignition is large. A small auto ignition may induce a secondary auto ignition, in many cases, mass burned by the secondary auto ignition is extremely large.
X