• Title/Summary/Keyword: Hydrogen-Air Diffusion Flames

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Investigation of liftoff mechanisms in hydrogen turbulent non-premixed jet flames (수소 난류확산화염에서의 부상 메커니즘에 대한 연구)

  • Oh, Jeong-Seog;Kim, Mun-Ki;Choi, Yeong-Il;Yoon, Young-Bin
    • 한국가시화정보학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2006.12a
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    • pp.135-140
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    • 2006
  • The stabilization mechanism of turbulent, lifted jet flames in a non-premixed condition has been studied experimentally. The objectives are to explain the phenomenon of a liftoff height decreasing as increasing fuel velocity and to reveal the mechanisms of flame stability Hydrogen was varied from 100 to 300 m/s and a coaxial air was fixed at 16 m/s with a coflow air less than 0.1 m/s. The technique of PIV and OH PLIF was used simultaneously with CCD and ICCD cameras. It was found that the liftoff height of the jet decreased with an increased fuel jet exit velocity. The leading edge at the flame base was moving along the stoichiometric line. Finally we confirmed that the stabilization of lifted hydrogen diffusion flames is related with a turbulent intensity, which means combustion is occurred where the local flow velocity is equal to the turbulent flame propagation velocity.

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Characteristics of Stabilization Point in Lifted Turbulent Hydrogen Diffusion Jet with Coaxial Air (부상된 동축공기 수소 난류확산화염에서의 화염안정화 특성)

  • Oh, Jeong-Seog;Kim, Mun-Ki;Yoon, Young-Bin
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Aeronautical & Space Sciences
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    • v.36 no.4
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    • pp.352-356
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    • 2008
  • In this study of lifted hydrogen jet with coaxial air, we have experimentally studied the characteristics of stabilization point in turbulent diffusion flames. The objectives are to present the phenomenon of a liftoff height decreasing as increasing fuel velocity and to analyse the flame structure and behavior including liftoff mechanisms. The fuel jet exit velocity was changed from 100 up to 300 m/s and a coaxial air velocity was fixed at 16 m/s with a coflow air less than 0.1 m/s. For the simultaneous measurement of velocity field and reaction zone, PIV and OH PLIF technique was used with two Nd:Yag lasers and CCD cameras. It has been suggested that the stabilization of lifted hydrogen diffusion flames was correlated with a turbulent intensity, $S_t{\sim}u^{\prime}$, and jet Reynolds number, $S_t{\sim}Re^{0.017}_{jet}$.

Flame-Vortex Interaction and Mixing in Turbulent Hydrogen Diffusion Flames with Coaxial Air (동축공기 수소확산화염에서 화염-와류 상호작용 및 혼합)

  • Kim, Mun-Ki;Oh, Jeong-Seog;Choi, Young-Il;Yoon, Young-Bin
    • 한국가시화정보학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2007.11a
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    • pp.149-154
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    • 2007
  • This study examines the effect of acoustic excitation using forced coaxial air on the flame characteristics of turbulent hydrogen nonpremixed flames. A resonance frequency was selected to acoustically excite the coaxial air jet due to its ability to effectively amplify the acoustic amplitude and reduce flame length and NOx emissions. Acoustic excitation causes the flame length to decrease by 15 % and consequently, a 25 % reduction in EINOx is achieved, compared to a flame without acoustic excitation. Moreover, acoustic excitation induces periodical fluctuation of the coaxial air velocity, thus resulting in slight fluctuation of the fuel velocity. From phase-lock PIV and OH PLIF measurement, the local flow properties at the flame surface were investigated under acoustic forcing. During flame-vortex interaction in the near field region, the entrainment velocity and the flame surface area increased locally near the vortex. This increase in flame surface area and entrainment velocity is believed to be a crucial factor in reducing flame length and NOx emission in coaxial jet flames with acoustic excitation. Local flame extinction occurred frequently when subjected to an excessive strain rate, indicating that intense mass transfer of fuel and air occurs radially inward at the flame surface.

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Non-premixed Hydrogen Flame Structure in Supersonic Coflowing Air Flows

  • Kim, Ji-Ho;Kim, Je-Hung;Yoon, Young-Bin;Park, Chul-Woung;Hahn, Jae-Won
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.7 no.1
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    • pp.1-7
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    • 2002
  • Experiments have been performed to investigate the structure of axisymmetric hydrogen diffusion flame in a supersonic coflow air. The characteristics and structure of supersonic flames are compared with those of subsonic flames as the velocity of coflow air increases from subsonic to supersonic velocity of Mach 1.8. Also, the subsonic and supersonic flow fields are analyzed numerically for the non-reacting conditions and the possible flame contours indicated by fuel mass fraction are compared with the measured OH radical distributions. It is found that the flame structure indicates more like a partially premixed flame as the coflow air velocity is increased from subsonic to supersonic regimes; strong reaction zone indicated by intense OH signal is found at the center, which is different from subsonic flame cases. And it is shown that the fuel jet passes along the recirculation zones behind the bluff-body fuel nozzle resulting in relatively long mixing time. This is believed to be the reason of the partially premixed flame characteristics found in the present supersonic flames.

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Reduction of NOx Emissions in Turbulent Hydrogen Diffusion Flame using Acoustic Excitation (음파가진에 의한 동축공기 수소 확산화염의 NOx 배출저감연구)

  • Kim, Mun-Ki;Han, Jeong-Jae;Yoon, Sang-Wook;Yoon, Young-Bin
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.13-19
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    • 2005
  • Measurements of flame length and NOx emissions have been conducted to investigate the effects of acoustic excitation on flame structure in turbulent hydrogen diffusion flames with coaxial air. When the acoustic excitation of a specific frequency is applied to coaxial air stream, flame length is dramatically reduced, resulting in reduction of flame residence time. Consequently, EINOx could decrease up to 35 % and this shows that acoustic excitation is effective in reducing NOx emissions. Mie scattering technique has been used to visualize the vortex structure induced by acoustic excitation and vortex formation, development and destruction were observed quantitatively. As a result, vortex entrains coflow air into fuel stream and mixing rate between fuel and air is significantly enhanced, which may contribute to reduction of NOx emissions.

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A Numerical Analysis of Acoustic-Pressure Response of H2-Air Diffusion Flames with Application of Time-Lag Model (시간지연 모델의 적용을 통한 수소/공기 확산화염의 음향파 응답 분석)

  • Sohn, Chae-Hoon;Lim, Jun-Seok
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Propulsion Engineers
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    • v.16 no.1
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    • pp.1-8
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    • 2012
  • Acoustic-pressure response of diluted hydrogen-air diffusion flames is investigated numerically by adopting a fully unsteady analysis of flame structures in low and high pressure regimes. As acoustic frequency increases, finite-rate chemistry is enhanced through a nonlinear accumulation of heat release rate for any pressure regime, leading to a high amplification index. Same numerical results are analyzed with application of a pressure-sensitive time lag model, and thereby, interaction index and time lag are calculated for each pressure regime. The interaction index has the largest value in each pressure regime at an acoustic frequency near 1000 Hz. In a high-pressure regime, flames are more unstable than in a low-pressure regime. The interaction index shows a good agreement with the amplification index.

Characteristics of Autoignited Laminar Lifted Flames in Heated Coflow Jets of Carbon Monoxide/Hydrogen Mixtures (일산화탄소/수소 혼합기의 가열된 동축류 제트에서 자발화된 층류 부상화염의 특성)

  • Choi, Byung-Chul;Chung, Suk-Ho
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B
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    • v.36 no.6
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    • pp.639-646
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    • 2012
  • The characteristics of autoignited lifted flames in laminar jets of carbon monoxide/hydrogen fuels have been investigated experimentally in heated coflow air. In result, as the jet velocity increased, the blowoff was directly occurred from the nozzle-attached flame without experiencing a stabilized lifted flame, in the non-autoignited regime. In the autoignited regime, the autoignited lifted flame of carbon monoxide diluted by nitrogen was affected by the water vapor content in the compressed air oxidizer, as evidenced by the variation of the ignition delay time estimated by numerical calculation. In particular, in the autoignition regime at low temperatures with added hydrogen, the liftoff height of the autoignited lifted flames decreased and then increased as the jet velocity increased. Based on the mechanism in which the autoignited laminar lifted flame is stabilized by ignition delay time, the liftoff height can be influenced not only by the heat loss, but also by the preferential diffusion between momentum and mass diffusion in fuel jets during the autoignition process.

Effects of Shock Waves on the Mixing and the Recirculation Zone of Supersonic Diffusion Flames (초음속 확산화염 내의 혼합과 재순환 영역에 대한 충격파의 영향)

  • Kim, Ji-Ho;Huh, Hwan-Il;Choi, Jeong-Yeol;Yoon, Young-Bin;Jeung, In-Seuck
    • 한국연소학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 1998.10a
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    • pp.123-129
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    • 1998
  • A numerical study has been conducted to investigate the effect of shock waves on the mixing and the recirculation zone of a hydrogen jet diffusion flame in a supersonic combustor. The general trends are compared with the experimental results obtained from the supersonic combustor at the University of Michigan. For the numerical simulation of supersonic diffusion flames, multi-species Navier-Stokes equations and detailed chemistry reaction equations of $H_2$-Air are considered. The $K-{\omega}/k-{\varepsilon}$ blended two equation turbulent model is used. Roe's FDS method and MUSCL method are used for convection fluxes in governing equations. Numerical results show that when slender wedges are mounted at the combustor wall the mixing and the combustion are enhanced and the size of recirculation zone is increased . The flame shape of supersonic flames is different in the flame-tip; it is not closed but open. The flame shape is shown to be greatly affected by shock waves.

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A Numerical Study on Effect of Radiative Heat Loss on Extinction of Hydrogen Diffusion Flames at High Pressure (고압하에서 수소 확산화염의 소염에 미치는 복사 열손실 효과에 관한 수치적 연구)

  • Oh, Tae-Kyun;Sohn, Chae-Hoon
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B
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    • v.32 no.5
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    • pp.351-358
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    • 2008
  • Extinction characteristics of hydrogen-air diffusion flames at various pressures are investigated numerically by adopting counterflow flame configuration as a model flamelet. Especially, effect of radiative heat loss on flame extinction is emphasized. Only gas-phase radiation is considered here and it is assumed that $H_2O$ is the only radiating species. Radiation term depends on flame thickness, temperature, $H_2O$ concentration, and pressure. From the calculated flame structures at various pressures, flame thickness decreases with pressure, but its gradient decreases at high pressure. Flame temperature and mole fraction of $H_2O$ increase slightly with pressure. Accordingly, as pressure increases, radiative heat loss becomes dominant. When radiative heat loss is considered, radiation-induced extinction is observed at low strain rate in addition to transport-induced extinction. As pressure increases, flammable region, where flame is sustained, shifts to the high-temperature region and then, shrunk to the point on the coordinate plane of flame temperature and strain rate. The present numerical results show that radiative heat loss can reduce the operating range of a combustor significantly.

The Characteristics of Unconfined Hydrogen Diffusion Flames in Supersonic Air Flows (초음속 공기 유동장에서의 수소 확산 화염 특성에 대한 연구)

  • 김제흥;심재헌;김지호;윤영빈
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Propulsion Engineers
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    • v.4 no.4
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    • pp.78-86
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    • 2000
  • The objective of this research is to understand the characteristics of a nonpremixed, turbulent, hydrogen jet flame which is stabilized in Mach 1.8 coflowing air flows. In order to investigate the flame structure, flame lengths and fuel trajectories were measured by using direct photography, acetone PLIF, Mie scattering techniques, and numerical simulation. Effect of increasing air velocity was investigated when fuel velocity is fixed. The subsonic flame length was decreased drastically, however the supersonic flame length was increased slowly Then the change of flame blow out characteristics was observed as varying fuel nozzle lip thickness. The flame stability can be increased when fuel nozzle lip thickness was increased, which indicates that the minimum fuel lip thickness ratio is required for the stable supersonic flames. Also, it is found that fuel jet is blocked by high pressure zone and low scattering zone is made. Then the fuel that was moving along the recirculation zone had longer residence time within the supersonic flames, which made partially premixed zone.

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