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Can cool flames support quasi-steady alkane droplet burning?
- Source :
- Combustion and Flame. 159:3583-3588
- Publication Year :
- 2012
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2012.
-
Abstract
- Experimental observations of anomalous combustion of n-heptane droplets burning in microgravity are reported. Following ignition, a relatively large n-heptane droplet first undergoes radiative extinction, that is, the visible flame ceases to exist because of radiant energy loss. But the droplet continues to experience vigorous vaporization for an extended period according to a quasi-steady droplet-burning law, ending in a secondary extinction at a finite droplet diameter, after which a vapor cloud rapidly appears surrounding the droplet. We hypothesize that the second-stage vaporization is sustained by low-temperature, soot-free, “cool-flame” chemical heat release. Measured droplet burning rates and extinction diameters are used to extract an effective heat release, overall activation energy, and pre-exponential factor for this low-temperature chemistry, and the values of the resulting parameters are found to be closer to those of “cool-flame” overall reaction-rate parameters, found in the literature, than to corresponding hot-flame parameters.
- Subjects :
- Meteorology
Chemistry
General Chemical Engineering
technology, industry, and agriculture
General Physics and Astronomy
Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Radiant energy
General Chemistry
Activation energy
Mechanics
Cool flame
Combustion
complex mixtures
eye diseases
humanities
law.invention
Physics::Fluid Dynamics
Ignition system
Fuel Technology
law
Extinction (optical mineralogy)
Vaporization
Radiative transfer
Physics::Chemical Physics
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00102180
- Volume :
- 159
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Combustion and Flame
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........bc3d75696e01be299ddb76994224f53b