scholarly journals Numerical and Experimental Investigations on Combustion Characteristics of Premixed Lean Methane–Air in a Staggered Arrangement Burner with Discrete Cylinders

Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (23) ◽  
pp. 6397
Author(s):  
Meng Yue ◽  
Mao-Zhao Xie ◽  
Jun-Rui Shi ◽  
Hong-Sheng Liu ◽  
Zhong-Shan Chen ◽  
...  

Premixed combustion of lean methane–air in an artificial porous media burner with staggered alumina cylinders was experimentally and numerically performed. Numerical simulations were conducted at gas mixture velocities of 0.43–0.86 m/s and equivalence ratios of 0.162 and 0.243, respectively. Through comparison with experimental results, temperature distribution, peak temperature and flame propagation velocity are analyzed and discussed in detail. The numerical calculated temperature profile over the axis of the combustor coincided well with test data in the post-flame zone, however a certain deviation was found in the preheated zone. A two-dimensional flame shape was observed and the flame thickness was the size of cylinder diameter. The peak temperature increased with the gas mixture inlet velocity at the certain equivalence ratio, and its peak value was about 1.8–2.16 times higher than the adiabatic combustion temperature under the desired equivalence ratio, which indicates that super-adiabatic combustion was the case for all the numerical simulations. The flame propagating velocity had a positive correlation with the gas mixture inlet velocity.

2012 ◽  
Vol 614-615 ◽  
pp. 73-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Yan Zhang ◽  
Hong Sheng Liu ◽  
Zhen Jie Xu

The phenomenon of combustion of a gaseous mixture in a two-dimension alumina ( ) particle packed bed porous media burner is studied by means of a numerical simulation with FLUENT software using two-step reaction mechanism. The Eddy-dissipation-concept (EDC) model, the standard model and the Discrete- Ordinates (DO) radiation model are used in this paper. It is concluded that the methane/air gas mixture with lower equivalence ratio or with faster inlet velocity, can achieve the faster wave propagates. The methane/air gas mixture with lower equivalence ratio or with faster inlet velocity, can achieve the faster wave propagates.


Author(s):  
Fan Gong ◽  
Yong Huang

The objective of this work is to investigate the flame stabilization mechanism and the impact of the operating conditions on the characteristics of the steady, lean premixed flames. It’s well known that the flame base is very important to the existence of a flame, such as the flame after a V-gutter, which is typically used in ramjet and turbojet or turbofan afterburners and laboratory experiments. We performed two-dimensional simulations of turbulent premixed flames anchored downstream of the heat-conducting V-gutters in a confined passage for kerosene-air combustion. The flame bases are symmetrically located in the shear layers of the recirculation zone immediately after the V-gutter’s trailing edge. The effects of equivalence ratio of inlet mixture, inlet temperature, V-gutter’s thermal conductivity and inlet velocity on the flame base movements are investigated. When the equivalence ratio is raised, the flame base moves upstream slightly and the temperature gradient dT/dx near the flame base increases, so the flame base is strengthened. When the inlet temperature is raised, the flame base moves upstream very slightly, and near the flame base dT/dx increases and dT/dy decreases, so the flame base is strengthened. As the V-gutter’s thermal conductivity increases, the flame base moves downstream, and the temperature gradient dT/dx near the flame base decreases, so the flame base is weakened. When the inlet velocity is raised, the flame base moves upstream, and the convection heat loss with inlet mixture increases, so the flame base is weakened.


Author(s):  
Gi-Don Na ◽  
Frank Kameier ◽  
Nils Springer ◽  
Michael Mauß ◽  
C. O. Paschereit

The acoustical characteristics of cooling fans are an essential criterion of product quality in the automotive industry. Fan modules have to suffice growing customer expectations which are reflected in the comfort requirements set by car manufacturers around the world. In order to locate dominant acoustic sources and to reduce the noise emission generated by a shrouded fan configuration, numerical simulations and experimental investigations are performed. The working approach considers variously modified fan geometries and their evaluation regarding arising vortex flow phenomena and their effect on a decreased sound pressure level (SPL) in consideration of an improvement or the constancy of aerodynamic fan performance. Particular emphasis lies on the analysis of secondary flows in the blade tip region by post-processing CFD-results. Due to the large number of geometrical modifications investigated and the importance of highly resolved eddy structures, a hybrid approach is chosen by applying the SAS-SST turbulence model in URANS simulations. The SAS (Scale Adaptive Simulation) delivers LES (Large Eddy Simulation) content in unsteady regions of a RANS-simulation and exhibits not nearly the high computational effort needed to perform a full scale LES. An assessment of the actual propagation of noise emission into the far-field is made by performing experimental investigations on the most promising modifications. The acoustic measurements are carried out in a fan test stand in the anechoic chamber of Duesseldorf University of Applied Sciences. The aerodynamic performance is measured in a fan test rig with an inlet chamber setup in accordance to ISO 5801. The measured acoustical and aerodynamic performances are validated by the industrial partner. The results of the acoustic measurements are in turn utilized to determine indicators of noise radiation in the numerical simulation. Within this work an innovative geometry modification is presented which can be implemented into shrouded fan configurations with backward-skewed blades. The new design exhibits a reduced SPL (A-weighted) of approx. 4 dB over the entire operating range while showing no significant deterioration on the aerodynamic performance. While the design was registered for patent approval cooperatively by the industrial partner and Duesseldorf University of Applied Sciences, further investigations regarding variations of design parameters are performed and presented in this paper. All numerical simulations are performed with ANSYS CFX, a commercial solver widely spread in the industry. Methods similar to those shown in this work can be implemented in the design phase of axial fans in order to develop acoustically optimized fan geometries.


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (S2) ◽  
pp. S226-S234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Gagliano ◽  
Francesco Nocera ◽  
Maurizio Detommaso ◽  
Gianpiero Evola

2020 ◽  
pp. 146808742095133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantinos Bardis ◽  
Panagiotis Kyrtatos ◽  
Guoqing Xu ◽  
Christophe Barro ◽  
Yuri Martin Wright ◽  
...  

Lean-burn gas engines equipped with an un-scavenged prechamber have proven to reduce nitrogen oxides (NOx) emissions and fuel consumption, while mitigating combustion cycle-to-cycle fluctuations and unburned hydrocarbon (UHC) emissions. However, the performance of a prechamber gas engine is largely dependent on the prechamber design, which has to be optimised for the particular main chamber geometry and the foreseen engine operating conditions. Optimisation of such complex engine components relies partly on computationally efficient simulation tools, such as quasi and zero-dimensional models, since extensive experimental investigations can be costly and time-consuming. This article presents a newly developed quasi-dimensional (Q-D) combustion model for un-scavenged prechamber gas engines, which is motivated by the need for reliable low order models to optimise the principle design parameters of the prechamber. Our fundamental aim is to enhance the predictability and robustness of the proposed model with the inclusion of the following: (i) Formal derivation of the combustion and flow submodels via reduction of the corresponding three-dimensional models. (ii) Individual validation of the various submodels. (iii) Combined use of numerical simulations and experiments for the model validation. The resulting model shows very good agreement with the numerical simulations and the experiments from two different engines with various prechamber geometries using a set of fixed calibration parameters.


Author(s):  
Ivan R. Sigfrid ◽  
Ronald Whiddon ◽  
Marcus Alde´n ◽  
Jens Klingmann

The lean stability limit of a prototype syngas burner is investigated. The burner is a three sector system, consisting of a separate igniter, stabilizer and Main burner. The ignition sector, Rich-Pilot-Lean (RPL), can be operated with both rich or lean equivalence values, and serves to ignite the Pilot sector which stabilizes the Main combustion sector. The RPL and Main sectors are fully premixed, while the Pilot sector is partially premixed. The complexity of this burner design, especially the ability to vary equivalence ratios in all three sectors, allows for the burner to be adapted to various gases and achieve optimal combustion. The gases examined are methane and a high H2 model syngas (10% CH4, 22.5% CO, 67.5% H2). Both gases are combusted at their original compositions and the syngas was also diluted with N2 to a low calorific value fuel with a Wobbe index of 15 MJ/m3. The syngas is a typical product of gasification of biomass or coal. Gasification of biomass can be considered to be CO2 neutral. The lean stability limit is localized by lowering the equivalence ratio from stable combustion until the limit is reached. To get a comparable blowout definition the CO emissions is measured using a non-dispersive infrared sensor analyzer. The stability limit is defined when the measured CO emissions exceed 200 ppm. The stability limit is measured for the 3 gas mixtures at atmospheric pressure. The RPL equivalence ratio is varied to investigate how this affected the lean blowout limit. A small decrease in stability limit can be observed when increasing the RPL equivalence ratio. The experimental values are compared with values from a perfectly stirred reactor modeled (PSR), under burner conditions, using the GRI 3.0 kinetic mechanism for methane and the San Diego mechanism for the syngas fuels.


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