Fossil Energy Update


Book Description







Optic Diagnostics on Pulverized Coal Particles Combustion Dynamics and Alkali Metal Release Behavior


Book Description

This book focuses on pulverized coal particle devolatilization, ignition, alkali metal release behavior, and burnout temperature using several novel optic diagnostic methods on a Hencken multi-flat flame burner. Firstly, it presents a novel multi-filter technique to detect the CH* signal during coal ignition, which can be used to characterize the volatile release and reaction process. It then offers observations on the prevalent transition from heterogeneous ignition to hetero-homogeneous ignition due to ambient temperature based on visible light signal diagnostics. By utilizing the gap between the excitation energies of the gas and particle phases, a new low-intensity laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (PS-LIBS) is developed to identify the presence of sodium in the particle or gas phase along the combustion process. For the first time, the in-situ verification of the gas phase Na release accompanying coal devolatilization is fulfilled when the ambient temperature is high enough. In fact, particle temperature plays a vital role in the coal burnout process and ash particle formation. The last part of the book uses RGB color pyrometry and the CBK model to study the char particle temperature on a Hencken burner. It offers readers valuable information on the technique of coal ignition and combustion diagnostics as well as coal combustion characteristics.










Experimental and Theoretical Studies of Laminar Burning Speed and Flame Instability of Alternative Fuels and Refrigerants


Book Description

"Alternative fuels and alternative refrigerants have attracted a lot of attention as many are deemed to be environmentally friendly. Consequently, the combustion behavior of fuels such as Syngas, Biogas, Liquified petroleum gas (LPG), and Gas to liquid (GTL) premixed flames were studied. In this investigation, the laminar burning speed and the flame instability of alternative fuels and refrigerants and different diluents (Exhaust gas recirculation (EGR), Helium, CO2) mixtures were evaluated both experimentally and numerically. Experiments were conducted using a spherical vessel to measure laminar burning speed and a cylindrical vessel to investigate flame instability. The cylindrical vessel is set up in a Z-shape Schlieren system, coupled with a high-speed CMOS camera that is used to capture evolutionary behavior of flames at up to 40,000 frames per second (around 2000 frames per second in general case). Upon ignition, the pressure rises as a function of time, during flame propagation in the spherical chamber, is the primary input of a multi-shell thermodynamic model, used to calculate the laminar burning speed for smooth flames. Power law correlations were developed for experimental burning speed results of different combustible mixtures over a wide range of equivalence ratios, temperatures, pressures, and diluent concentrations. For the onset of flame instability, a correlation for the ratio of critical pressure to initial pressure of syngas/air/diluent flames over a wide range of initial temperatures, initial pressures, equivalence ratios, diluent concentrations, and hydrogen percentages were developed. Kinetics simulations calculated by 1-D steady state flame code from CANTERA were compared with various experimental burning speed results"--Author's abstract.