화학공학소재연구정보센터
Energy Conversion and Management, Vol.108, 549-565, 2016
Study on combustion characteristics of dimethyl ether under the moderate or intense low-oxygen dilution condition
Experiments and numerical simulations were conducted in this paper to study the combustion behavior of dimethyl ether in the moderate or intense low-oxygen dilution regime, in terms of thermal/chemical structure and chemical kinetics associated with nitrogen oxide and carbon monoxide emissions. Several co-flow temperatures and oxygen concentrations were involved in the experiments to investigate their impacts on the flame behavior systematically. The results show that in the moderate or intense low-oxygen dilution regime, oxygen concentrations in the flame base slightly increased because of the prolonged ignition delay time of the reactant mixture due to oxidizer dilution, which changed the local combustion process and composition considerably. The oxidation rates of hydrocarbons were significantly depressed in the moderate or intense low-oxygen dilution regime, such that a fraction of unburned hydrocarbons at the furnace outlet were recirculated into the outer annulus of the furnace, which changed the local radial profiles of carbon monoxide, methane, and hydrogen partially. Moreover, with the increment in co-flow temperature or oxygen mole fraction, flame temperature, and hydroxyl radical, carbon monoxide, and hydrogen mole fractions across the reaction zone increased gradually. For the dimethyl ether-moderate or intense low-oxygen dilution flame, temperature homogeneity was improved at higher co-flow temperature or lower oxygen mole fraction. The carbon monoxide emission depended on the levels of temperature and hydroxyl radical concentration inside the reaction zone significantly. Emission index of carbon monoxide increased at lower co-flow temperature or oxygen mole fraction; and it was more sensitive to the variation in co-flow oxygen mole fraction. Additionally, the dominant formation pathways of nitrogen oxide in the dimethyl ether-moderate or intense low-oxygen dilution flame were clarified. The contribution of the thermal pathway was fairly unimportant. Emission index of nitrogen oxide increased as co-flow temperature or oxygen mole fraction was increased. The ratio of nitrogen dioxide emission index to nitrogen oxide emission index decreased with the increment in co-flow temperature or oxygen mole fraction. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.