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酵素噴流による高温CO-H2混合ガス燃焼の数値解析YAMASHITA, Hiroshi, HAYASHI, Naoki, YAMAMOTO, Kazuhiro, OKUYAMA, Goro, 山下, 博史, 林, 直樹, 山本, 和弘, 奥山, 悟郎 11 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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転炉内二次燃焼に及ぼす炉内水素濃度の影響YAMASHITA, Hiroshi, HAYASHI, Naoki, YAMAMOTO, Kazuhiro, KISHIMOTO, Yasuo, YAMADA, Toshio, OKUYAMA, Goro, 山下, 博史, 林, 直樹, 山本, 和弘, 岸本, 康夫, 山田, 敏雄, 奥山, 悟郎 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Assessment of thermal radiation arithmetic's for jet flames : A study involving generic calculation methods concerning radiation from jet flames with the purpose to determine the safety distance for flame effectsAnderson, Anne Lee January 2018 (has links)
Jet flames are commonly used as flame effects in pyrotechnical shows, and are also a possible risk in industries that uses pressurised flammable gas. For these users it is important to make fire safety engineering calculations to minimise the risks. This project focus on jet flames that are used in pyrotechnic shows where, e.g. it is important to determine the safety distance to the audience. Up to now most studies made concerning jet flames regards jet flames in subsonic regiments, whilst there is a lack of studies concerning sonic jet flames and mathematical formulations for radiation from these cases are limited. This makes pre-determination of temperatures, safety distances, flame heights etc. a challenge. Based on information found, and assumptions when needed, calculations of the safety distance were made.
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Experimental study of dilute spray combustion / Etude expérimentale de la combustion diphasique en régime diluéVerdier, Antoine 05 December 2017 (has links)
La combustion diphasique implique de nombreux phénomènes physiques complexes, comprenant l'atomisation, la dispersion, l'évaporation et la combustion. Bien que la simulation numérique soit un outil performant pour aborder ces différentes interactions entre les phases liquides et gazeuses, la méthode doit être validée par des études expérimentales fiables. Par conséquent, des données expérimentales précises sur la structure de la flamme et sur les propriétés de la phase liquide et gazeuse le long des étapes d'évaporation et de combustion sont nécessaires. La complexité des configurations aéronautiques réelles implique d'étudier l'effet des propriétés locales sur la dynamique des flammes pour une configuration canonique. Ce travail, réalisé dans le cadre du projet ANR TIMBER, a pour objectif d'améliorer la compréhension de la combustion en flux diphasique, ainsi que de produire une base de données efficace et originale pour la validation des modèles utilisés dans les LES. / Liquid fuels are the primary energy source in a wide range of applications including industrial and residential furnaces, internal combustion engines and propulsion systems. Pollutant emission reduction is currently one of the major constraints for the design of the next generation combustion chamber. Spray combustion involves many complex physical phenomena including atomization, dispersion, evaporation and combustion, which generally take place simultaneously or within very small regions in the combustion chambers. Although numerical simulation is a valuable tool to tackle these different interactions between liquid and gas phases, the method needs to be validated through reliable experimental studies. Therefore, accurate experimental data on flame structure and on liquid and gas properties along the evaporation and combustion steps are needed and are still challenging. A joint effort between numerical and experimental teams is necessary to meet tomorrow's energy challenges and opportunities. The complexity of the real aeronautical configurations implies to study the effect of local properties in flame dynamics on a canonical configuration, which presents the essential feature of very well defined boundary conditions. This work, carried out within the framework of the ANR TIMBER project, aims to improve the understanding of two-phase flow combustion, as well as to produce an efficient and original database for the validation of the models used in LES.
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Experiment and Simulation of Autoignition in Jet Flames and its Relevance to Flame Stabilization and StructureAl-Noman, Saeed M. 06 1900 (has links)
Autoignition characteristics of pre-vaporized iso-octane, primary reference fuels, gasolines, and dimethyl ether (DME) have been investigated experimentally in a coflow with elevated temperature of air. With the coflow air at relatively low initial temperatures below autoignition temperature Tauto, an external ignition source was required to stabilize the flame. Non-autoignited lifted flames had tribrachial edge structures and their liftoff heights correlated well with the jet velocity scaled by the stoichiometric laminar burning velocity, indicating the importance of the edge propagation speed on flame stabilization balanced with local flow velocity. At high initial temperatures over Tauto, the autoignited flames were stabilized without requiring an external ignition source. The autoignited lifted flames exhibited either tribrachial edge structures or Mild combustion behaviors depending on the level of fuel dilution.
For the iso-octane and n-heptane fuels, two distinct transition behaviors were observed in the autoignition regime from a nozzle-attached flame to a lifted tribrachial-edge flame and then a sudden transition to lifted Mild combustion as the jet velocity increased at a certain fuel dilution level. The liftoff data of the autoignited flames with tribrachial edges were analyzed based on calculated ignition delay times for the pre-vaporized fuels. Analysis of the experimental data suggested that ignition delay time may be much less sensitive to initial temperature under atmospheric pressure conditions as compared with predictions. For the gasoline fuels for advanced combustion engines (FACEs), and primary reference fuels (PRFs), autoignited liftoff data were correlated with Research Octane Number and Cetane Number.
For the DME fuel, planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) of formaldehyde (CH2O) and CH* chemiluminescence were visualized qualitatively. In the autoignition regime for both tribrachial structure and mild combustion, formaldehyde were found mainly between the fuel nozzle and the lifted flame edge. On the other hand, they were formed just prior to the flame edge for the non-autoignited lifted flames. The effect of fuel pyrolysis and partial oxidation were found to be important in explaining autoignited liftoff heights, especially in the Mild combustion regime.
Flame structures of autoignited flames were investigated numerically for syngas (CO/H2) and methane fuels. The simulations of syngas fuel accounting for the differential diffusion have been performed by adopting several kinetic mechanisms to test the models ability in predicting the flame behaviors observed previously. The results agreed well with the observed nozzle-attached flame characteristics in case of non-autoignited flames. For autoignited lifted flames in high temperature regime, a unique autoignition behavior can be predicted having HO2 and H2O2 radicals in a broad region between the nozzle and stabilized lifted flame edge.
Autoignition characteristics of laminar nonpremixed methane jet flames in high-
temperature coflow air were studied numerically. Several flame configurations were investigated by varying the initial temperature and fuel mole fraction. Characteristics of chemical kinetics structures for autoignited lifted flames were discussed based on the kinetic structures of homogeneous autoignition and flame propagation of premixed mixtures. Results showed that for autoignited lifted flame with tribrachial structure, a transition from autoignition to flame propagation modes occurs for reasonably stoichiometric mixtures. Characteristics of Mild combustion can be treated as an autoignited lean premixed lifted flame. Transition behavior from Mild combustion to a nozzle-attached flame was also investigated by increasing the fuel mole fraction.
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Etude de l'influence de la dilution du combustible et de l'oxydant dans le processus de décrochage de flammes-jet non-prémélangées et l'émission de polluants / Study of the influence of air-side and fuel-side dilution on the lifting process of an attached non-premixed jet-flame and on pollutant emissionsMarin Ospina, Yohan Manuel 17 November 2016 (has links)
La compréhension des mécanismes pilotes de la stabilisation des flammes-jet non-prémélangées constitue un point clé dans la caractérisation des modes opératoires des brûleurs industriels fonctionnant en régime de combustion diluée. Ce travail porte son attention sur l'étude expérimentale de l'influence de la dilution du combustible ou de l'air, sur le processus de décrochage et l'émission des polluants d'une flamme-jet non-prémélangée accrochée au brûleur. L'investigation est menée via un grand nombre d'expériences par combinaison des conditions suivantes : i) dioxyde de carbone (CO2), azote (N2), argon (Ar) et vapeur d'eau (H2Ov), sont utilisés comme diluants ; ii) deux configurations de dilution : dilution de l'air ou dilution du combustible ; iii) un couple de vitesses d'air et de combustible couvrant le domaine d'hystérésis de la flamme dans sa totalité, du régime de jet laminaire à celui de jet turbulent. Ceci permet de discriminer l'influence des effets intrinsèques à la nature du diluant de celle de l'aérodynamique des réactants (combustible et oxydant), dans la stabilité de la flamme accrochée. En particulier, les différences comportementales de la réponse de la flamme à la dilution de l'air ou à celle du combustible, sont analysées. Ces deux configurations de dilution diffèrent par deux effets de mélange, indépendants de la réaction, qui jouent un rôle important dans le cas de la dilution du combustible, mais sont négligeables dans le cas de celle de l'air : i) un effet dû à la modification de la fraction de mélange stœchiométrique. ii) un impact mécanique induit par l'apport de matière (diluants) responsable d'une augmentation de la vitesse des réactants. L'étude se divise en trois principales étapes. D'abord la réponse globale de la flamme à la dilution est étudiée via ses limites de décrochage quantifiées par les fractions molaires critiques des diluants dans l'oxydant ou dans le combustible, mesurées au décrochage. Le nombre de Peclet du combustible, Pef, est identifié comme le nombre adimensionnel qui ordonne ces limites de décrochage de manière homothétique pour tous les diluants. Grâce au comportement homothétique deux coefficients d'affinité, Kd,ox pour le cas de la dilution de l'air et Kd,f pour celle du combustible, sont introduits. Ils sont définis comme le rapport entre la limite de décrochage obtenue avec un diluant et celle obtenue avec le CO2 , à Pef = cste. Ceux-ci permettent l'établissement de deux polynômes génériques décrivant les limites de décrochage pour tous les diluants testés et dans toute la gamme des conditions aérodynamiques étudiées. En effet, Kd,ox et Kd,f englobent l'ensemble des effets physico-chimiques d'un diluant (dilution pure, thermique, propriétés de transport, chimie) et ceux des impacts mécaniques, affectant la stabilité de la flamme. Ils permettent de trouver les lois d'auto-similitude au décrochage pour un diluant chimiquement faible quelconque, à partir des résultats obtenus dans ce travail. Ensuite, une étude locale et détaillée du processus de décrochage induit par la dilution est réalisée. Celui-ci se base sur l'approche du bout propagatif décrivant la stabilité de la flamme accrochée comme résultant d'un équilibre à sa base entre la vitesse de l'écoulement et la vitesse de propagation. Afin de démontrer le lien entre cette approche et la stabilité de la flamme, une analyse approfondie des caractéristiques de sa base (localisation, intensité du radical CH* et champ de vitesses) est réalisée. Les résultats confirment la pertinence de l'approche du bout propagatif, comme mécanisme descriptif de la stabilisation de la flamme accrochée en présence de dilution. Enfin, une étude caractérisant aussi bien l'influence de la nature des diluants que celle de la configuration de dilution choisie (air ou combustible), sur l'émission des polluants (suies, NOx et CO), est présentée. / Understanding the main mechanisms piloting non-premixed jet flame stability is an important point in characterizing the operation modes of industrials burners in which dilution is involved. This work puts special emphasis on the experimental study of the influence of air-side and methane-side dilution in the lifting process of attached non-premixed jet flames. The study is based on numerous experiments combining the following conditions : i) carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrogen (N2), argon (Ar) or water vapor (H20v,) used as diluents d ; ii) two diluted configurations : air-side or methane-side dilution ; iii) two air and fuel velocities covering the entire flame hysteresis domain, from the laminar to the turbulent regime. This allows the influence of the intrinsic diluent nature effects to be discriminated from those of the aerodynamics of the reactants (fuel and oxidant), in attached flame stability. In particular, the behavioral differences of the flame response to air-side or to fuel-side dilution are analyzed. These two configurations differ by two mixing effects which are independent of the combustion reaction, and which are significant when the fuel is diluted, but negligible when air is diluted : i) an effect due to the changes in the stoichiometric mixture fraction ; ii) a mechanical impact induced by the addition of matter (diluents) producing an increase in the bulk velocity of the reactants. The study is composed of three parts. First, the global flame response to dilution is analyzed on the basis of the lifting limits defined as the critical molar fractions of the diluents in the fuel or in the oxidant measured at liftoff. The fuel Peclet number, Pef, appears as the dimensionless number which puts these limits in a homothetic order. This homothetic behavior allows the introduction of two affinity parameters, Kd,ox for air-side dilution and Kd,f for fuel-side dilution. They are defined by the ratio of the flame lifting limits calculated with a diluent d and with CO2, at Pef=const. Kd,ox and Kd, allow two generic polynomial laws to be established describing the flame lifting limits for all the diluents and in the whole range of aerodynamic conditions of this study. Indeed, Kd,ox and Kd,f encompass all the diluent effects affecting flame stability (pure dilution, thermal, transport, chemical), to which mechanical impacts are added. These coefficients make it possible to obtain the self-similarity laws of the lifting limits for any chemically-weak diluent, by using the results obtained in this work. Then, a local and detailed study of the flame lifting process induced by dilution is presented. This is based on the flame-leading-edge approach describing flame stability as a result of the balance between the incoming gas velocity of the reactants and the flame propagation velocity at the flame base. In order to show the link between this approach and flame stability, an extensive analysis of the flame-base characteristics (location, CH* emission intensity and velocity field) is carried out. The results attest to the pertinence of the propagative flame-leading-edge, as the mechanism describing the attached flame stability under dilution. Finally, a study concerning the influence of both the diluent nature and the diluted configuration (air or fuel) on pollutant emissions (soot, NOx and CO) is presented.
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