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Measurement of flammability in a closed cylindrical vessel with thermal criteria

Accurate flammability limit information is necessary for safe handling of gas and
liquid mixtures, and safe operation of processes using such mixtures. The flammability
limit is the maximum or minimum fuel concentration at which a gas mixture is
flammable in a given atmosphere. Because combustion occurs in the vapor phase, even
in the case of liquids the flammability limits are applicable after calculating the vapor
compositions. The body of flammability data available in the literature is often
inadequate for use with the variety of conditions encountered in industrial applications.
This is due to the scarcity of flammability data for fuel mixtures in non-standard
atmospheric conditions, and inconsistencies in flammability values provided by different
experimental methods.
This work reports on the design, construction and utilization of an apparatus
capable of measuring flammability limits for a range of conditions including fuel
mixtures, varying oxygen concentrations, and extended pressure and temperature ranges.
The flammability apparatus is a closed cylindrical reaction vessel with visual, pressure
and thermal sensors. A thermal criterion was developed for use with the apparatus based
on observations of combustion behavior within the reaction vessel. This criterion provides more detailed information about the combustion than is provided by the
pressure criterion methods.
Measured flammability limits of several hydrocarbon mixtures in air compare
well with limits obtained by open glass cylinder experiments, but not with the results of
counterflow apparatus experiments. The current results show that Le Chatelier’s rule
describes the mixture results adequately. Minimum oxygen concentrations also were
determined for methane, butane, and methane-butane mixtures and compared with
values reported in the literature. Lower flammability limits were determined for an
equimolar methane-butane mixture at varying oxygen concentrations.
Results show that the flammability data determined with thermal criteria has an
acceptable level of accuracy. Recommendations for improving apparatus are made,
based upon observations made while operating the flammability apparatus.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/4965
Date25 April 2007
CreatorsWong, Wun K.
ContributorsHolste, James C.
PublisherTexas A&M University
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Format3692135 bytes, electronic, application/pdf, born digital

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