SOOT FORMATION IN LAMINAR PARTIALLY PREMIXED COFLOW FLAMES BY THERMOPHORETIC PARTICLE DENSITOMETRY
Conference Paper
Publication Date:
2016
abstract:
The formation of soot particles in combustion depends on several factors that
include: pressure, temperature, fuel chemical structure and extent of premixing. An
improved version of the thermophoretic particle densitometry (TPD) method, has
been used in this study for quantitative and qualitative characterization of soot
particles generated in laminar partially-premixed co-flow flames having different
equivalence ratios. To this aim, the dependence of thermocouple temperature
response on particle concentration and properties of collected material has been
exploited. A variety of thermal emissivity values are measured for flame-formed
carbonaceous particles, ranging from ? ? 0.4 - 0.5 for freshly nucleated particles up
to the value of ? = 0.95, typical of a mature soot particle. The correct determination
of ? is necessary to accurately evaluate the particle volume fraction at the early
stage of the soot formation, where particle concentration measurement is indeed
particularly challenging. Data also evidence that oxidation has a severe role in
affecting both soot emissivity and soot concentration determination by TPD.
However, an attempt to include soot oxidation in the TPD volume fraction
procedure is also illustrated resulting in a good agreement of the data obtained with
other techniques. Moreover, a modeling analysis based on a sectional approach has
been performed in order to corroborate the experimental findings.
Iris type:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
THERMOPHORETIC PARTICLE DENSITOMETRY; soot
List of contributors: