
Measurement on minimum ignition energy of n-decane with pyrolysis
Author(s) -
Wenrui Peng,
Baiquan Lin,
Jiaming Sheng
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
iop conference series. earth and environmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1755-1307
pISSN - 1755-1315
DOI - 10.1088/1755-1315/714/4/042019
Subject(s) - decane , minimum ignition energy , materials science , ethylene , mie scattering , ignition system , equivalence (formal languages) , analytical chemistry (journal) , equivalence ratio , thermal decomposition , thermodynamics , statistics , combustion , mathematics , chemistry , organic chemistry , optics , physics , scattering , discrete mathematics , light scattering , combustor , catalysis
Measurement on the minimum ignition energy (MIE) of n-decane with pyrolysis is investigated experimentally. Certain decomposition rate n-decane vapor is simulated by blending certain proportion of ethylene into n-decane vapor. Two equivalence ratios (1 and 0.7) and five blending ratios (0,0.2 0.4,0.6,0.7) of ethylene are, respectively, designed to represent different decomposition rates and equivalence ratios. The effect of different decomposition rates and equivalence ratios on the MIE of n-decane is investigated in following experiments. Two experimental methods are used for measurement. Technique of high-speed schlieren system is adopted to obtain images of the flame kernel by which the relationship between flame kernel radius and flame speed is calculated. An ignition probability model based on the logic regression theory is established to obtain the ignition probability curve. Results indicate that MIE is sensitive to the blending ratio of ethylene when equivalence ratio is 0.7. With elevated blending ratio of ethylene, MIE decreases rapidly firstly and with the continuous increasing of the blending ratio, the decreasing of MIE is lagging which indicates that there is a limit to the effect of the blending ratio of ethylene on the MIE. It is also found that values of MIE are closed when ethylene blending ratio is big enough whatever the equivalence ratio is.