Combustion and Flame, Vol.159, No.4, 1385-1392, 2012
Experimental determination of emission and laminar burning speeds of alpha-pinene
Several researches have reported that under certain conditions forest fires with normal behavior suddenly start to propagate at unusual and very fast rate of spread. A thermochemical approach, based on the ignition of a Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) cloud, has been proposed previously to explain these accelerating forest fires. Indeed, some vegetal species when heated emit volatile substances. We have shown using a flash pyrolysis apparatus that a typical Mediterranean plant, Rosmarinus officinalis, emits eighteen components, mainly a-pinene. Laminar burning speeds and Markstein lengths as well as flame thicknesses of alpha-pinene/air premixed flames are determined using the spherical expanding flames method. Experiments are carried out in a spherical vessel at atmospheric pressure. The effects of equivalence ratio (0.7-1.4) and unburned gas temperature (353-453 K) are studied. Combustion characteristics are obtained using a nonlinear methodology. A correlation is developed to calculate the laminar burning speeds as a function of equivalence ratio and temperature. The experimental results are compared to the computed ones of JP-10 and n-decane as well as to those found in the literature for these compounds. (C) 2011 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Rosmarinus officinalis emissions;Laminar burning speed;Markstein length;Flame thickness;Accelerating forest fire