Ignition by Hot Transient Jets in Confined Mixtures of Gaseous Fuels and Air

Ignition of a combustible mixture by a transient jet of hot reactive gas is important for safety of mines, prechamber ignition in IC engines, detonation initiation, and novel constant-volume combustors. The present work is a numerical study of the hot jet ignition process in a long constant-volume c...

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Main Authors: Abdullah Karimi, M. Razi Nalim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2016-01-01
Series:Journal of Combustion
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/9565839
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spelling doaj-516108f6ec1242219069d4ae09d98f792021-07-02T02:50:44ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Combustion2090-19682090-19762016-01-01201610.1155/2016/95658399565839Ignition by Hot Transient Jets in Confined Mixtures of Gaseous Fuels and AirAbdullah Karimi0M. Razi Nalim1Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USAIndiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USAIgnition of a combustible mixture by a transient jet of hot reactive gas is important for safety of mines, prechamber ignition in IC engines, detonation initiation, and novel constant-volume combustors. The present work is a numerical study of the hot jet ignition process in a long constant-volume combustor (CVC) that represents a wave rotor channel. The hot jet of combustion products from a prechamber is injected through a converging nozzle into the main CVC chamber containing a premixed fuel-air mixture. Combustion in a two-dimensional analogue of the CVC chamber is modeled using a global reaction mechanism, a skeletal mechanism, or a detailed reaction mechanism for three hydrocarbon fuels: methane, propane, and ethylene. Turbulence is modeled using the two-equation SST k-ω model, and each reaction rate is limited by the local turbulent mixing timescale. Hybrid turbulent-kinetic schemes using some skeletal reaction mechanisms and detailed mechanisms are good predictors of the experimental data. Shock wave traverse of the reaction zone is seen to significantly increase the overall reaction rate, likely due to compression heating, as well as baroclinic vorticity generation that stirs and mixes reactants and increases flame area. Less easily ignitable methane mixture is found to show slower initial reaction and greater dependence on shock interaction than propane and ethylene.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/9565839
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abdullah Karimi
M. Razi Nalim
spellingShingle Abdullah Karimi
M. Razi Nalim
Ignition by Hot Transient Jets in Confined Mixtures of Gaseous Fuels and Air
Journal of Combustion
author_facet Abdullah Karimi
M. Razi Nalim
author_sort Abdullah Karimi
title Ignition by Hot Transient Jets in Confined Mixtures of Gaseous Fuels and Air
title_short Ignition by Hot Transient Jets in Confined Mixtures of Gaseous Fuels and Air
title_full Ignition by Hot Transient Jets in Confined Mixtures of Gaseous Fuels and Air
title_fullStr Ignition by Hot Transient Jets in Confined Mixtures of Gaseous Fuels and Air
title_full_unstemmed Ignition by Hot Transient Jets in Confined Mixtures of Gaseous Fuels and Air
title_sort ignition by hot transient jets in confined mixtures of gaseous fuels and air
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Combustion
issn 2090-1968
2090-1976
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Ignition of a combustible mixture by a transient jet of hot reactive gas is important for safety of mines, prechamber ignition in IC engines, detonation initiation, and novel constant-volume combustors. The present work is a numerical study of the hot jet ignition process in a long constant-volume combustor (CVC) that represents a wave rotor channel. The hot jet of combustion products from a prechamber is injected through a converging nozzle into the main CVC chamber containing a premixed fuel-air mixture. Combustion in a two-dimensional analogue of the CVC chamber is modeled using a global reaction mechanism, a skeletal mechanism, or a detailed reaction mechanism for three hydrocarbon fuels: methane, propane, and ethylene. Turbulence is modeled using the two-equation SST k-ω model, and each reaction rate is limited by the local turbulent mixing timescale. Hybrid turbulent-kinetic schemes using some skeletal reaction mechanisms and detailed mechanisms are good predictors of the experimental data. Shock wave traverse of the reaction zone is seen to significantly increase the overall reaction rate, likely due to compression heating, as well as baroclinic vorticity generation that stirs and mixes reactants and increases flame area. Less easily ignitable methane mixture is found to show slower initial reaction and greater dependence on shock interaction than propane and ethylene.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/9565839
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AT mrazinalim ignitionbyhottransientjetsinconfinedmixturesofgaseousfuelsandair
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