
The influence of pressure on the spontaneous ignition of inflammable gas-air mixtures. I.—Butane-air mixtures
Publication year - 1933
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society of london. series a, containing papers of a mathematical and physical character
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2053-9150
pISSN - 0950-1207
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.1933.0132
Subject(s) - ignition system , spontaneous combustion , pentane , heptane , combustion , butane , compression (physics) , thermodynamics , adiabatic process , chemistry , hydrocarbon , autoignition temperature , atmospheric pressure , materials science , composite material , organic chemistry , meteorology , physics , catalysis
As part of an investigation into explosions of various hydrocarbon-air media at elevated temperatures and pressures, we have recently been determining the influence of varying initial pressures up to 15 atmospheres on their reactivities during slow combustion up to their ultimate ignition points. And as the results obtained in the experiments on the spontoneous ignition of butane-air mixtures have presented some very striking new features, which seem of undoubted importance in regard to the problem of “knock” in internal combustion engines, we are submitting them in the present communication. Hitherto, few investigators have determined spontaneous ignition temperatures under pressure and, in particular, little is known concerning the behaviours of mixtures with air of the higher members of the paraffin hydrocarbons. The principal research on this problem has been that of Tizard and Pye, who, employing the adiabatic compression method, found with pentane-, hexane-, heptane-, and octane-air mixtures that with compression ratios of 6·09 to 1 ignition occurred at temperatures ofcirca 300° C. which (a ) were dependent upon the observed time-lags between compression and ignition, (b ) varied but little with mixture composition, and (c ) were lowered slightly as the paraffin series was ascended.