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Chemical kinetic insights into the ignition dynamics of n-hexane

Authors :
Efstathios Al Tingas
Hong G. Im
Zhandong Wang
Dimitris A. Goussis
S. Mani Sarathy
Source :
Combustion and Flame. 188:28-40
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

Normal alkanes constitute a significant fraction of transportation fuels, and are the primary drivers of ignition processes in gasoline and diesel fuels. Low temperature ignition of n-alkanes is driven by a complex sequence of oxidation reactions, for which detailed mechanisms are still being developed. The current study explores the dynamics of low-temperature ignition of n-hexane/air mixtures, and identifies chemical pathways that characterize the combustion process. Two chemical kinetic mechanisms were selected as a comparative study in order to better understand the role of specific reaction sequences in ignition dynamics: one mechanism including a new third sequential O 2 addition reaction pathways (recently proposed by Wang et al. 2017), while the other without (Zhang et al. 2015). The analysis is conducted by applying tools generated from the computational singular perturbation (CSP) approach to two distinct ignition phenomena: constant volume and compression ignition. In both cases, the role of the third sequential O 2 addition reactions proves to be significant, although it is found to be much more pronounced in the constant volume cases compared to the HCCI. In particular, in the constant volume ignition case, reactions present in the third sequential O 2 addition reaction pathways (e.g., KDHP → products + OH) contribute significantly to the explosivity of the mixture; when accounted for along with reactions P(OOH) 2 + O 2 → OOP(OOH) 2 and OOP(OOH) 2 → KDHP + OH, they decrease ignition delay time of the mixture by up to 40%. Under HCCI conditions, in the first-stage ignition, the third-O 2 addition reactions contribute to the process, although their role decays with time and becomes negligible at the end of the first stage. The second ignition stage is dominated almost exclusively by hydrogen-related chemistry.

Details

ISSN :
00102180
Volume :
188
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Combustion and Flame
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........983e2498aee06388cadf198ddb0fb7c0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.combustflame.2017.09.024