JOURNAL ARTICLE

Transient Flow Field Effects on Soot Volume Fraction in Diffusion Flames

Michele E. DecroixWilliam L. Roberts

Year: 2000 Journal:   Combustion Science and Technology Vol: 160 (1)Pages: 165-189   Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Abstract

Abstract Quantitative measurements of soot concentration made in an oscillating propane-air counterflow diffusion flame are presented. The non-intrusive laser induced incandescence (LII) technique was used to make spatially and temporally resolved measurements of soot volume fraction in these transient flames as a function of initial steady strain rate, forcing frequency, and forcing amplitude of the strain rate fluctuation. The results of this study show that the soot formation process becomes insensitive to fluctuations in strain rate at high initial strain rates. At low initial strain rates, however, the maximum soot concentration is drastically reduced with high frequency, high amplitude fluctuations compared to the corresponding steady strain soot volume fraction. Low frequency oscillations are found to always increase the maximum soot concentration, by up to a factor of six for some conditions. These measurements provide important insight into the response of the chemistry control1ing the soot formation process in flamelets subject to unsteady rates of strain.

Keywords:
Soot Volume fraction Incandescence Volume (thermodynamics) Diffusion Diffusion flame Amplitude Propane Chemistry Analytical Chemistry (journal) Combustion Mechanics Volumetric flow rate Thermodynamics Strain rate Materials science Optics Composite material Chromatography Physics Physical chemistry Organic chemistry

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59
Cited By
2.09
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
29
Refs
0.86
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Citation History

Topics

Combustion and flame dynamics
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Computational Mechanics
Advanced Combustion Engine Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Chemical Engineering →  Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Atmospheric Science
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