Loading…

Effects of water sprays on flame propagation in hydrogen/air/steam mixtures

Different aspects of the interaction between droplets and flame propagation have been studied. First, flammability limits of H2/air/steam mixtures at 100kPa for 3 temperatures between 358 and 383K. the flammability domain was marginally modified by increasing the temperature. The mixtures were not f...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Proceedings of the Combustion Institute 2015-01, Vol.35 (3), p.2715-2722
Main Authors: Cheikhravat, H., Goulier, J., Bentaib, A., Meynet, N., Chaumeix, N., Paillard, C.-E.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Different aspects of the interaction between droplets and flame propagation have been studied. First, flammability limits of H2/air/steam mixtures at 100kPa for 3 temperatures between 358 and 383K. the flammability domain was marginally modified by increasing the temperature. The mixtures were not flammable for H2O mol%55. The presence of water mist in initially dry H2/air mixtures at 100kPa and 298K did not shift the lower flammability limit as long as the droplets density number was below a critical value. The slight shift in the limit was essentially due to the saturated water vapor pressure. The effect of dispersed large droplets (SMD=200-250 mu m) on laminar H2/air flames was also marginal except when the droplet velocity is of the same order of magnitude as the flame speed in the same direction. Non-flammable H2/air/steam mixtures at 358K and 383K were made explosive by aspersion with cold water spray. However, the pressure increase was limited when ignition occurred for mixtures close to the flammability limit. In this case, the burned gas bubble was rapidly dragged downward by the spray. The water mist effect on the deflagration of H2/air mixtures were studied for various equivalence ratios. With droplets diameter
ISSN:1540-7489
1540-7489
DOI:10.1016/j.proci.2014.05.102