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Technical Paper

Effects of Hydrogen Concentration on Stoichiometric H2/CH4/Air Premixed Turbulent Flames

2013-10-14
2013-01-2563
Outwardly propagating stoichiometric flames of H2/CH4/air were studied in a constant volume fan-stirred combustion chamber in order to investigate the effects of hydrogen concentration on the turbulent burning velocities. The experiments were conducted at mixture temperature of 350 K and mixture pressure of 0.10 MPa. The mole fraction of hydrogen in the binary fuel was varied from 0 to 1.0 for turbulence intensities equal to 1.23, 1.64 and 2.46 m/s. Laminar flames of the mixtures were first investigated to obtain the unstretched laminar burning velocities and the associated Markstein numbers. The unstretched laminar burning velocity increased non-linearly with increase in hydrogen fraction. The Markstein number and the effective Lewis number of the mixtures varied non-monotonically with hydrogen mole fraction. The Markstein number was used to investigate the influence of thermo-diffusive effects on the turbulent burning velocity.
Technical Paper

An Analysis on Cycle-by-cycle Variation and Trace-knock using a Turbulent Combustion Model Considering a Flame Propagation Mechanism

2019-12-19
2019-01-2207
Gasoline engines have the trace-knock phenomena induced by the fast combustion which happens a few times during 100 cycles. And that constrains the thermal efficiency improvement due to limiting the ignition timing advance. So the authors have been dedicating a trace-knock simulation so that we could obtain any pieces of information associated with trace-knock characteristics. This simulation consists of a turbulent combustion model, a cycle-by-cycle variation model and a chemical calculation subprogram. In the combustion model, a combustion zone is considered in order to obtain proper turbulent combustion speed through wide range of engine speed. From a cycle-by-cycle variation analysis of an actual gasoline engine, some trace-knock features were detected, and they were involved in the cycle-by-cycle variation model. And a reduced elementary reaction model of gasoline PRF (primary reference fuel) was customized to the knocking prediction, and it was used in the chemical calculation.
Technical Paper

Turbulent Burning Velocities of Stoichiometric Hydrogen-Carbon Monoxide-Air Flames at Elevated Pressures

2014-10-13
2014-01-2701
Syngas, is an alternative fuel consisting mainly of hydrogen and carbon monoxide in various proportions. An understanding of the effects of the varying constituents on the combustion characteristics is important for improvement of the thermal efficiency of syngas-fueled engines. The effects of hydrogen concentration and mixture pressure on the turbulent burning velocity of outwardly propagating stoichiometric flames of hydrogen-carbon monoxide-air were studied in a constant volume fan-stirred combustion chamber at a constant mixture temperature of 350 K. The mole fraction of hydrogen in the binary fuel was varied from 0 to 1.0, at mixture pressures of 0.10, 0.25 and 0.50 MPa. The turbulence intensity was kept constant at 3.27 m/s. For fixed mixture pressures, it was found that the turbulent burning velocity increased with an increase in hydrogen fraction primarily due to increase in the unstretched laminar burning velocity.
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