Title: AME 436 Energy and Propulsion
1AME 436Energy and Propulsion
- Lecture 4
- Basics of combustion
2Outline
- Why do we need to study combustion?
- Types of flames - premixed and nonpremixed
- Basics of chemical reaction rates
- Law Of Mass Action (LOMA)
- Arrhenius form of temperature dependence
- Premixed flames
- Deflagrations - burning velocity, flame
thickness, temperature effect - Turbulence effects
- Homogeneous reaction
- Nonpremixed flames
- General characteristics
- Droplets
- Gas-jet
- Turbulence effects
3Why do we need to study combustion?
- Chemical thermodynamics only tells us the end
states - what happens if we wait forever and a
day for chemical reaction to occur - We also need to know how fast reactions occur
- How fast depends on both the inherent rates of
reaction and the rates of heat and mass transport
to the reaction zone(s) - Chemical reactions heat mass transport
combustion - Some reactions occur too slowly to be of any
consequence, e.g. - 2 NO ? N2 O2
- has an adiabatic flame temperature of 2869K (no
dissociation) or 2650K (with dissociation, mostly
NO O) but no one has ever made a flame with NO
because reaction rates are too slow! - What do we do with this information in the
context of engines? - Determine rates of flame propagation and heat
generation - Determine conditions for knock in
premixed-charge engines - Determine rates of pollutant formation and
destruction
4Types of flames
- Premixed - reactants are intimately mixed on the
molecular scale before combustion is initiated
several flavors - Deflagration
- Detonation
- Homogeneous reaction
- Nonpremixed - reactants mix only at the time of
combustion - have to mix first then burn several
flavors - Gas jet (Bic lighter)
- Liquid fuel droplet
- Liquid fuel jet (e.g. Kuwait oil fire, candle)
- Solid (e.g. coal particle, wood)
5Premixed flames - deflagration
- Propagating subsonic front sustained by
conduction of heat from the hot (burned) gases to
the cold (unburned) gases which raises the
temperature enough that chemical reaction can
occur - Since chemical reaction rates are very sensitive
to temperature, most of the reaction is
concentrated in a thin zone near the
high-temperature side - May be laminar or turbulent
Turbulent premixed flame experiment in a
fan-stirred chamber (http//www.mech-eng.leeds.ac.
uk/res-group/combustion/activities/Bomb.htm)
6Premixed flames - detonation
- Supersonic propagating front sustained by heating
of gas by a shock wave - After shock front, need time (thus distance
time x velocity) before reaction starts to occur
(induction zone) - After induction zone, chemical reaction heat
release occur - Pressure temperature behavior coupled strongly
with supersonic/subsonic gasdynamics - Ideally only M3 1 Chapman-Jouget detonation
is stable - (M Mach number Vc V velocity,
- c sound speed (?RT)1/2 for ideal gas)
7Premixed flames - homogeneous reaction
- Model for knock in premixed-charge engines
- Fixed mass (control mass) with uniform (in space)
T, P and composition - No propagation in space but propagation in time
- In laboratory, we might heat the chamber to a
certain T and see how long it took to react in
engine, compression of mixture (increases P T,
thus reaction rate) will initiate reaction
8Non-premixed or diffusion flames
- Only subsonic
- Generally assume mixed is burned - mixing
slower than chemical reaction
9? (??)1/2
10Law of Mass Action (LoMA)
- First we need to describe rates of chemical
reaction - For a chemical reaction of the form
- ?AA ?BB ? ?CC ?DD
- e.g. 1 H2 1 I2 ? 2 HI
- A H2, ?A 1, B I2, ?B 1, C HI, ?C 2, D
nothing, ?D 0 - the Law of Mass Action (LoMA) states that the
rate of reaction - i concentration of molecule i (usually
moles per liter) - kf forward reaction rate constant
- How to calculate i ?
- According to ideal gas law, the total moles of
gas per unit volume (all molecules, not just type
i) P/?T - Then i (Total moles / volume)(moles i /
total moles), thus - i (P/?T)Xi (Xi mole fraction of i
(see lecture 2)) - Minus sign on dA/dt and dB/dt since A B are
being depleted - Basically LoMA states that the rate of reaction
is proportional to the number of collisions
between the reactant molecules, which in turn is
proportional to the concentration of each
reactant
11Comments on LoMA
- The reaction rate constant kf is usually of the
Arrhenius form - Z pre-exponential factor, a another
(nameless) constant, E activation energy
(cal/mole) working backwards, units of Z must be
(moles per liter)1-?A-vB/(K-asec) - With 3 parameters (Z, n, E) any curve can be fit!
- The exponential term causes extreme sensitivity
to T for E/? gtgt T!
12Comments on LoMA
- Boltzman (1800s) showed that the fraction of
molecules in a gas with translational kinetic
energy greater than some value E is proportional
to exp(-E/?T), thus E represents the energy
barrier that must be overcome for reaction to
occur - Note that E is not the same thing as enthalpy of
reaction ?hf (or heating value QR) and in general
the two have no relation to each other - E
affects reaction rates whereas ?hf QR affect
end states (e.g. Tad) - of course ?hf QR affect
reaction rates indirectly by affecting T - Diary of a collision
13Comments on LoMA
- The full reaction rate expression is then
- H2 I2 ? 2HI is one of few examples where the
actual conversion of reactants to products occurs
in a single step most fuels of interest go
through many intermediates during oxidation even
for the simplest hydrocarbon (CH4) the standard
mechanism (http//www.me.berkeley.edu/gri_mech/)
includes 53 species and 325 individual reactions! - The only likely reactions in gases, where the
molecules are far apart compared to their size,
are 1-body, 2-body or 3-body reactions, i.e. A ?
products, A B ? products or A B C ?
products - In liquid or solid phases, the close proximity of
molecules makes n-body reactions plausible
14Comments on LoMA
- Recall that the forward reaction rate is
- Similarly, the rate of the reverse reaction can
be written as - kb backward reaction rate constant
- At equilibrium, the forward and reverse rates
must be equal, thus -
15Deflagrations - burning velocity
- Since the burning velocity (SL) ltlt sound speed,
the pressure across the front is almost constant - How fast will the flame propagate? Simplest
estimate based on the hypothesis that - Rate of heat conducted from hot gas to cold gas
(i) - Rate at which enthalpy is conducted through flame
front (ii) - Rate at which heat is produced by chemical
reaction (iii) -
16Deflagrations - burning velocity
- Estimate of i
- Conduction heat transfer rate -kA(?T/?)
- k gas thermal conductivity, A cross-sectional
area of flame - ?T temperature rise across front Tproducts -
Treactants Tad - T8 - ? thickness of front (unknown at this point)
- Estimate of ii
- Enthalpy flux through front (mass flux) x Cp x
?T - Mass flux ?VA (? density of reactants ?8, V
velocity SL) - Enthalpy flux ?8CpSLA?T
- Estimate of iii
- Heat generated by reaction QR x (dfuel/dt) x
Mfuel x Volume - Volume A?
- QR CP?T/f
17Burning velocity, flame thickness
- Combine (i) and (ii)
- ? k/?CpSL ?/SL (? flame thickness)
- ? k/?Cp thermal diffusivity (units
length2/time) - For air at 300K 1 atm, ? 0.2 cm2/s
- For gases ? ? D (? kinematic viscosity D
mass diffusivity) - For gases ? P-1T1.7 since k P0T.7, ? P1T-1,
Cp P0T0 - For typical stoichiometric hydrocarbon-air flame,
SL 40 cm/s, thus ? ?/SL 0.005 cm (!)
(Actually when properties are temperature-averaged
, ? 4?/SL 0.02 cm - still small!) - Combine (ii) and (iii)
- SL ??1/2
- ? overall reaction rate (dfuel/dt)/fuel8
(units 1/s) - With SL 40 cm/s, ? 0.2 cm2/s, ? 1600 s-1
- 1/? characteristic reaction time 625
microseconds - Heat release rate per unit volume (enthalpy
flux) / (volume) (?CpSLA?T)/(A?)
(?CpSL/k)(k?T)/? (k?T)/?2 - (0.07 W/mK)(1900K)/(0.0002 m)2 3 x 109 W/m3
!!! - Moral flames are thin, fast and generate a lot
of heat!
18Deflagrations - burning velocity
- More rigorous analysis (Zeldovich, 1940)
- Same functional form as simple estimate (SL
??1/2, where ? is an overall reaction rate)
with some additional constants - How does SL vary with pressure?
- Define order of reaction (n) ?A ?B since
- Thus SL ??1/2 P-1Pn-11/2 P(n-2)/2
- For typical n 2, SL independent of pressure
- For real hydrocarbons, working backwards from
experimental results, we find typically SL
P-0.1, thus n 1.8
19Deflagrations - temperature effect
- Since Zeldovich number (b) gtgt 1
- For typical hydrocarbon-air flames, E 40
kcal/mole - ? 1.987 cal/mole, Tad 2200K
- ? b 10, at T close to Tad, ? T10 !!!
- ? Thin reaction zone concentrated near
highest temperature - ? In Zeldovich (or any) estimate of SL, overall
reaction rate ? must be evaluated at Tad, not T8
or any other temperature - How can we estimate E? If reaction rate depends
more on E than concentrations , SL ??1/2
exp(-E/?Tad)1/2 - exp(?E/2?Tad) - Plot of ln(SL) vs. 1/Tad has
slope of -E/2? - If b isnt large, then ?(T8) ?(Tad) and
reaction occurs even in the cold gases, so no
control over flame is possible! - Since SL ?1/2, SL (Tadb)1/2 Tad5 typically!
20Deflagrations - summary
- These relations show the effect of Tad (depends
on fuel stoichiometry), ? (depends on diluent
gas (usually N2) P), ? (depends on fuel, T, P)
and pressure (engine condition) on laminar
burning rates - Re-emphasize these estimates are based on an
overall reaction rate real flames have 1000s of
individual reactions between 100s of species -
but we can work backwards from experiments or
detailed calculations to get these estimates for
the overall reaction rate parameters
21Deflagrations
Schematic of flame temperatures and laminar
burning velocities
Real data on SL (Vagelopoulos Egolfopoulos,
1998)
22Turbulent flames - motivation
- Almost all flames used in practical combustion
devices are turbulent because turbulent mixing
increases burning rates, allowing more
power/volume - Examples
- Premixed turbulent flames
- Gasoline-type (spark ignition, premixed-charge)
internal combustion engines - Stationary gas turbines (used for power
generation, not propulsion) - Nonpremixed flames
- Diesel-type (compression ignition,
nonpremixed-charge) internal combustion engines - Gas turbines
- Most industrial boilers and furnaces
23Basics of turbulence
- Good reference Tennekes A First Course in
Turbulence - Job 1 need a measure of the strength of
turbulence - Define turbulence intensity (u) as rms
fluctuation of instantaneous velocity u(t) about
mean velocity ( ) - Kinetic energy of turbulence massu2/2 KE per
unit mass (total in all 3 coordinate directions
x, y, z) 3u2/2 - Note that for a typical u/SL 5, with SL 40
cm/s, u 2 m/s, thus KE 6 m2/s2 6
(kg-m2/s2)/kg 6 J/kg - Is this KE large or small? Typical hydrocarbon
- f 0.062, QR 4.3 x 107 J/kg, thus for
fuel-air MIXTURE, energy/mass 0.062 4.3 x
107 J/kg 2.7 x 106 J/kg - i.e. 444,000 times larger than KE of turbulence
- Moral it pays to be turbulent (but not so
turbulent that flame quenching occurs as
discussed later)
24Basics of turbulence
- Job 2 need a measure of the length scale of
turbulence - Define integral length scale (LI) as
- Here the overbars denote spatial (not temporal)
averages - LI is a measure of size of largest eddies, i.e.
the largest scale over which velocities are
correlated - Typically related to size of system (tube or jet
diameter, grid spacing, ) - A(r) is the autocorrelation function at some time
t - Note A(0) 1 (fluctuations around the mean are
perfectly correlated at a point) - Note A(8) 0 (fluctuations around the mean are
perfectly uncorrelated if the two points are very
distant) - For truly random process, A(r) is an
exponentially decaying function - A(r) exp(-r/LI)
25Basics of turbulence
- In real experiments, generally know u(t) not u(x)
- can define time autocorrelation function A(x,?)
and integral time scale ?I at a point x - Here the overbars denote temporal (not spatial)
averages - With suitable assumptions LI (8/p)1/2u?I
- Define integral scale Reynolds number ReL ?
uLI/? - (? kinematic viscosity)
- Note generally ReL ? Reflow Vd/? typically u
0.1V, LI 0.5d, thus ReL 0.05 Reflow (e.g.
in pipe-flow turbulence, grid turbulence, flow
behind a cylinder, etc.)
26Characteristics of turbulent flames
- Most important property turbulent flame speed
(ST) - Most models based on physical models introduced
by Damköhler (1940) - Behavior depends on Karlovitz number - ratio of
turbulent strain rate to chemical rate for
standard Kolmogorov turbulence model - Low Ka Huygens propagation, thin fronts that
are wrinkled by turbulence but internal structure
is unchanged - High Ka Distributed reaction zones, broad
fronts - Note at low u/SL, ST/SL increases rapidly with
increasing u/SL, but at high enough u/SL there
is almost no increase in ST/SL and in fact flame
quenching occurs at sufficiently high u/SL (thus
high Ka (u/SL)2)
27Characteristics of turbulent flames
28Bradley et al. (1992)
- Compilation of data from many sources
ST/SL
u/SL
29Turbulent burning velocity
- Experimental results shown in Bradley et al.
(1992) based on smoothed data from many sources,
e.g. fan-stirred bomb
30Bradley et al. (1992)
- and we are talking MAJOR smoothing!
31Turbulent premixed flame modeling
- Thin-flame behavior observed in most practical
combustors - Damköhler (1940) in Huygens propagation regime,
flame front is wrinkled by turbulence but
internal structure and SL are unchanged - Propagation rate ST due only to area increase via
wrinkling ST/SL AT/AL - Many models, still much controversy about how to
model, but most show ST/SL u/SL
32Turbulent premixed combustion
- Models of premixed turbulent combustion dont
agree with experiments nor each other! - All models are trying to predict the same thing
33Turbulent premixed flame modeling
- Low u/SL weakly wrinkled flames
- ST/SL 1 (u/SL)2 (Clavin Williams, 1979) -
standard for many years - Actually Kerstein and Ashurst (1994) showed this
is valid only for periodic flows - for random
flows ST/SL - 1 (u/SL)4/3 - Higher u/SL strongly wrinkled flames
- Schelkin (1947) - AT/AL estimated from ratio of
cone surface area to base area height of cone
u/SL result - Yahkot (1988)
- Other models based on fractals,
probability-density functions, etc. most predict
ST/SL u/SL at high u/SL - For the purposes of this class well usually
assume ST/SL u/SL with the possibility of
bending or quenching at sufficiently high Ka
(u/SL)2
34Turbulence in engines
- How to get high turbulence in engines?
- Geometry of intake valves, ports, etc. - cause
gas to swirl as it enters combustion chamber - Cup-shaped piston head (squish)
- Obstacles in flow
35Homogenous reaction
- Given a homogenous system (T, P, same
everywhere at any instant in time, but may change
over time), how long will it take for the mixture
to react (explode?) - Model for knocking in premixed-charge piston
engines - As reaction starts, heat is released, temperature
increases, overall reaction rate ? increases,
heat is released faster, T rises faster, ?
increases faster, ltBOOMgt - Simple analysis - assumptions
- Single-step reaction ?AA ?BB ? ?CC ?DD
- Excess of B (example lean mixture with A
fuel, B oxygen) - ?A ?B 1
- Adiabatic, constant-volume, ideal gas, constant
Cv - Constant mass
36Homogenous reaction
- Energy equation - if all fuel consumed
- (Yf fuel mass fraction)
- So at any instant in time
- where Yf(t) is the instantaneous fuel mass
fraction (at t 0, no fuel consumed, T initial
temperature T8 at t 8, Yf 0, all fuel
consumed, T Tad) then from page 16 - (this simply says that there is a linear
relationship between the amount of fuel consumed
and the temperature rise) - Since we assumed ?A ?B 1, where A fuel, B
oxygen
37Homogenous reaction
- Reaction rate equation (assume n in RR expression
0) - Combine Eqs. 1, 2, 3, non-dimensionalize
- Notes on this result
- ? is the equivalence ratio for our special case
?A ?B 1 only valid for lean mixtures since
we assumed surplus of A fuel - Get pressure from P(t) ?8RT(t)
38Homogenous reaction
- This equation looks scary but its just a 1st
order nonlinear ordinary differential equation -
can integrate to find ?(?) (amount of reaction
product formed as a function of time) for various
values of the parameters ? (stoichiometry), ?
(activation energy, initial temperature T8), H
(heat release) - Initial condition is ? 1 at ? 0
- What do we expect?
- Since reaction rate is slowest at low T, reaction
starts slowly then accelerates - Induction time (e.g. time to reach 90
completion of reaction, ? 0.1) should depend
mostly on initial temperature T8, not final
temperature Tad since most of the time needed to
react is before self-acceleration occurs - This is very different from propagating flames
where SL depends mostly on Tad not T8 - why?
Because in the flame case there was a source of
high temperature (the burned gases) to raise the
gas up to near Tad before reaction started in
the homogenous case there is no such source - This means that the factors that affect flame
propagation and knock are very different
39Homogenous reaction
- Double-click chart to edit or change parameters
- Case shown ? 0.7, ? 10, H 6
- Note profile and time to ignite depend strongly
on ?, much less on ? and H
40Homogenous reaction
- In case of real chemistry, besides the thermal
acceleration mechanism there is also a chemical
or chain branching acceleration mechanism, e.g.
for H2-O2 - H O2 ? OH O
- H2 OH ? H H2O
- O H2 ? OH H etc.
- where 1 radical (H, OH, O) leads to 2, then 4,
then 8, radicals - In the case above, the net reaction would be
- 2 H2 O2 ? H OH H2O
- which shows the increase in the radical pool
- This chain branching mechanism leads to even
faster runaway than thermal runaway since 2x gt
e-a/x for sufficiently large x - What if no H to start with?
- H2 O2 ? HO2 H (mostly this - ?h 55
kcal/mole ) - H2 M ? H H M (slower since ?h 104
kcal/mole - too big) - O2 M ? O O M (?h 119 kcal/mole - even
worse) - (M any molecule)
41Non-premixed or diffusion flames
- Simplest approach to determining properties
mixed is burned - chemical reaction rates
faster than mixing rates - No inherent propagation rate (unlike premixed
flames where SL ??1/2) - No inherent thickness ? (unlike premixed flames
where thickness ?/SL) - in nonpremixed flames,
determined by equating convection time scale
?/V ? to diffusion time scale ?2/? ? ?
(??)1/2 where ? is a characteristic flow time
scale (e.g. d/V for a jet, where d diameter, V
velocity, or LI/u for turbulent flow, etc.) - Burning must occur near stoichiometric contour
where reactant fluxes are in stoichiometric
proportions (otherwise surplus of one reactant) - Burning must occur near highest T since ?
exp(-E/RT) is very sensitive to temperature (like
premixed flames)
42Non-premixed or diffusion flames
- Well look at two examples of non-premixed flames
which represent opposite extremes of what might
happen in a Diesel engine - Droplet combustion - vaporization of droplets is
slow, so droplets burn as individuals - Gas-jet flame - vaporization of droplets is so
fast, there is effectively a jet of fuel vapor
rather than individual droplets - Reality is in between, but in Diesels usually
closer to the gas jet with extras
Flynn, P.F, R.P. Durrett, G.L. Hunter, A.O. zur
Loye, O.C. Akinyemi, J.E. Dec, C.K. Westbrook,
SAE Paper No. 1999-01-0509.
43Droplet combustion
- Heat from flame is conducted to fuel surface,
vaporizes fuel, fuel convects/diffuses to flame
front, O2 diffuses to flame front from outside,
burning occurs at stoichiometric location - As fuel burns, droplet diameter d(t) decreases
until d 0 or droplet may extinguish before
reaching d 0 - Experiments typically show d(0)2 - d(t)2 Kt
- Model for droplets in Diesel engine combustion
44Droplet combustion
- How fast does droplet burn? Spherically-symmetric
model (Godsave, Spalding 1953), assuming mixed
is burned, affectionately called the
dee-squared law - d(0) droplet radius at time 0
- d(t) droplet radius at some later time t
- K droplet burning rate constant (m2/s)
- k gas thermal conductivity (W/mK)
- ?l droplet density (kg/m3)
- CP gas specific heat at constant pressure
(J/kgK) - QR fuel heating value per unit mass (J/kg)
- f stoichiometric fuel mass fraction
- T8 ambient air temperature (K)
- Td droplet vaporization temperature (K)
- Lv latent heat of vaporization of fuel (J/kg)
- B (Transfer number) ratio of heat generation
by chemical reaction to heat needed to vaporize
fuel typical values methanol 3, most
hydrocarbons 8 - 10 - Diameter of flame surrounding droplet (dflame)
45Droplet combustion
- The d2-law assumes no buoyant or forced
convection, but in engines there is likely to be
a lot of flow one relation for the effect of
flow on burning rate is - Red Droplet Reynolds number Ud(t)/?
- Nu Nusselt number based on droplet diameter
- U droplet velocity relative to gas ?/?
- Pr Prandtl number ?/?
- ? kinematic viscosity
- ? thermal diffusivity kg/?gCp,g
- Note that this result reduces to the previous one
for U 0 (thus Re 0)
46Droplet combustion
- Note all the heat release (QR), heat of
vaporization (Lv), etc. is tied up in B which
appears only inside a ln( ), thus changing these
properties hardly affects burning rate at all - Why? The more you vaporize fuel, the more
rapidly the fuel vapor blows out, thus the harder
it is for heat to be conducted to the fuel
surface
Marchese et al. (1999), space experiments,
heptane in O2-He
47Nonpremixed-gas flames - laminar gas-jet flames
- Flame height (Lf) determined by equating
diffusion time (dj2/D, dj jet diameter, D
oxygen diffusivity) to convection time (Lf/V) (V
jet exit velocity) - dj2/D Lf/V ? Lf Vdj2/D or Lf/dj Vdj/D
- Gases D ? ? Lf/dj Vdj/? Red
- Consistent with more rigorous models
48Nonpremixed turbulent jet flames
- Turbulent (Hottel and Hawthorne, 1949)
- For turbulent flows D is not constant but rather
D uLI - u V LI dj ? Lf dj (independent of Re)
- High V ? high u ? Ka large - flame lifts off
near base - Still higher - more of flame lifted
- When lift-off height flame height, flame blows
off (completely extinguished)
Lifted flame (green fuel blue flame)
49Summary - combustion
- Combustion is the combination of chemical
reaction with convective and diffusive transport
of thermal energy and chemical species - The most important distinction between flames is
premixed vs. non-premixed, i.e. whether the
reactants are mixed before combustion - Chemical reactions relevant to combustion are
generally VERY complicated but can often be
approximated (roughly) by a one step overall
reaction - Chemical reactions relevant to combustion
generally have high activation energy (more
precisely, high Zeldovich number b) and thus are
more sensitive to temperature than any other
property - Premixed flames
- Deflagrations - subsonic - burning velocity SL
(??)1/2 (? reaction rate at Tad) - Detonations - supersonic wave
- Homogenous reaction - time of reaction depends
mainly on T8 not Tad - Nonpremixed flames
- Mixed is burned
- Turbulence increases the rates of combustion by
increasing surface area (premixed) or mixing
rates (nonpremixed)