Litcius/Paper detail

Flame structure and burning velocity of flames propagating in binary iron aerosols

Amos Ravi, L.P.H. de Goey, J.A. van Oijen

2022Proceedings of the Combustion Institute20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A numerical study was performed for binary dispersed iron aerosols in air using different particle sizes with constant average particle size. The effects of particle size and density of the two aerosols on flame structure and speed are systematically investigated. Varying the amount of small and big particles results in separated and overlapped flame fronts. For higher values of particle size ratio (ratio between the size of big and small particles) and density of small particles, flame fronts are observed to overlap. The flame speed of the binary mixture is compared with the mono-dispersed case and the difference is analyzed for different particle size ratios. The addition of a small fraction of small particles in the binary mixture is found to result in a substantial increase in the flame speed if the particle size ratio is large. Detailed analyses on the variation of the total amount of fuel shows the particle size ratio determines the equivalence ratio at which the maximum flame speed occurs. The maximum flame speed as a function of equivalence ratio was observed to move from the lean to the rich side for particle size ratio sufficiently large enough.

Topics & Concepts

Particle sizeEquivalence ratioDensity ratioParticle (ecology)Materials scienceBinary numberFlame speedAspect ratio (aeronautics)Premixed flameMechanicsCombustionAnalytical Chemistry (journal)ChemistryPhysicsComposite materialChromatographyMathematicsOrganic chemistryPhysical chemistryOceanographyCombustorGeologyArithmeticCombustion and flame dynamicsFire dynamics and safety researchCombustion and Detonation Processes