Comprehensive Comparison of the Combustion Behavior for Low-Temperature Combustion of n-Nonane
Author(s) -
Junjiang Guo,
Weijun Peng,
Shijie Zhang,
Jiazhi Lei,
Jiantong Jing,
Ruyi Xiao,
Shiyun Tang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.9b03786
Subject(s) - combustion , ignition system , autoignition temperature , thermodynamics , chemistry , mechanics , physics , organic chemistry
To meet the increasing need for clean combustion, improve the combustion efficiency of fuels, and reduce the pollutants produced in the combustion process, it is necessary to systematically study the combustion of hydrocarbon fuels. An accurate and detailed chemical kinetic model is an important prerequisite for understanding the combustion performance of hydrocarbon fuels and studying complex chemical reaction networks. Therefore, based on ReaxGen, new detailed mechanisms for the low-temperature combustion of n -nonane are proposed and verified in detail in this study. Meanwhile, some international mainstream combustion models such as the LLNL model and the JetSurf 2.0 model are compared with ours, showing that the proposed new mechanisms can better predict the ignition delay combustion characteristics of n -nonane, and they also hold in a wide range of conditions. In addition, the numerical simulation results of the concentration curve calculated for the new mechanisms, especially Model v2, are in good agreement with the experimental data, and the mechanisms can reproduce the performance of the negative-temperature-coefficient behavior toward n -nonane ignition. The numerical simulation results of the laminar flame propagation velocity varying with the equivalence ratio are also in good agreement with the available experimental data. Finally, the ignition delay sensitivity of n -nonane is analyzed by the sensitivity analysis method; the key reactions affecting the ignition mechanism are investigated; and the reaction path analysis is conducted to better understand the models' predicted performance. In a word, the new mechanisms are helpful to understand the ignition properties of large hydrocarbon fuels for high-speed aircrafts.
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