Title: Emerging Technologies in Reacting Flows Lecture 2
1Emerging Technologies in Reacting Flows (Lecture
2)
- Applications of combustion (aka chemically
reacting flow) knowledge to other fields
(Lecture 1) - Frontal polymerization
- Bacteria growth
- Inertial confinement fusion
- Astrophysical combustion
- New technologies (Lecture 2)
- Transient plasma ignition
- HCCI engines
- Microbial fuel cells
- Future needs in combustion research (Lecture 3)
2Transient plasma ignition - motivation
- Multi-point ignition of flames has potential to
increase burning rates in many types of
combustion engines, e.g. - Pulse Detonation Engines
- Reciprocating Internal Combustion Engines
- High altitude restart of gas turbines
- Lasers, multi-point sparks challenging
- Lasers energy efficiency, windows, fiber optics
- Multi-point sparks multiple intrusive electrodes
- How to obtain multi-point, energy efficient
ignition? Transient Plasma Ignition (Wang et
al., 2005)
3Transient plasma discharges
- Also called pulsed corona discharges
- Not to be confused with plasma torch
- Initial phase of spark discharge (lt 100 ns) -
highly conductive (arc) channel not yet formed - Characteristics
- Multiple streamers of electrons
- High energy (10s of eV) electrons compared to
sparks (1 eV) - Low anode cathode drops, little radiation
shock formation - more efficient use of energy
deposited into gas
4Characteristics of transient plasma discharges
- For short durations (1s to 100s of ns depending
on pressure, geometry, gas, etc.) DC breakdown
threshold of gas can be exceeded without
breakdown if high voltage pulse can be created
and stopped quickly enough
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5Characteristics of transient plasma discharges
Transient plasma only
Transient plasma arc
- If arc forms, current increases some but voltage
drops more, thus higher consumption of capacitor
energy with little increase in energy deposited
in gas (still have corona, but followed by
(relatively ineffective) arc)
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6Transient plamsa discharges are energy-efficient
- Discharge efficiency ?d 10x higher for
transient plasma than for conventional sparks
7Engines 101 - slow burn reduces efficiency
- Burn starts earlier in compression process, has
to go to same v, result is higher s to get same
heat addition (? Tds) - Difference in work 2 triangular slivers vs.
rectangle - Burning BTDC or ATDC ALWAYS leads to lower
efficiency since ALWAYS lower TH for same TL,
thus ALWAYS lower efficiency Carnot strips
8Engine experiments
- Theiss et al., 2005
- 2000 Ford Ranger I-4 engine with dual-plug head
to test transient plasma spark at same time,
same operating conditions - National Instruments / Labview data acquisition
control - Horiba emissions bench
- Pressure / volume measurements
- Optical Encoder mounted to crankshaft
- Spark plug mounted Kistler piezoelectric pressure
transducer
9Electrode configuration
- Macor machinable ceramic insulator
- Coaxial shielded cable
- Point to plane geometry - by no means optimal
10On-engine results
- Transient-plasma (corona) ignition shows increase
in peak pressure under all conditions tested
Cylinder pressure (pounds/in2)
11On-engine results
- Transient plasma ignition shows increase in
Indicated Mean Effective Pressure (IMEP) under
all conditions tested
Cylinder pressure (pounds/in2)
Vmax
Vmin
12IMEP at various air / fuel ratios
- IMEP higher for transient plasma than spark,
especially for lean mixtures (nearly 30) - Coefficient of variance (COV) comparable
13Burn rate
- Integrated heat release shows faster burning with
transient plasma leads to greater effective heat
release
2900 RPM, ? 0.7
14Burn rates
- Transient plasma ignition shows substantially
faster burn rates at same conditions compared to
2-plug conventional ignition
2900 RPM, ? 0.7
15Emissions data - NOx
- Improved NOx performance vs. indicated efficiency
tradeoff compared to spark ignition by using
leaner mixtures with sufficiently rapid burning
(CO, UHC similar to spark ignition)
16Transient plasma ignition for PDEs
- Significant limitation of Pulsed Detonation
Engines is Deflagration to Detonation Transition
(DDT) distance - if too long, cant get DDT
within engine! - Formation of initial pressure waves from
deflagation is typically the slowest step, and is
most amenable to acceleration by transient plasma
ignition - Pre-DDT region has lower pressure, less ISP
- Detonation tube experiments (Lieberman et al.,
2005)
17Transient plasma ignition for PDEs
- Stoichiometric C2H4-O2 with N2 dilution (air
73.9 dilution) - Spark plug (SP) vs Transient Plasma (PI)
- Much lower ignition delay times (time to first
recorded pressure rise at Pcb1) with PI, with or
without turbulence-generating obstacles
(accelerates DDT but causes heat pressure
losses) - Note PI can reduce need for obstacles
associated losses
18HCCI engines
- Burning rapidly at minimum volume yields the best
possible thermal efficiency, but damage due to
knocking means we want to burn fast but not too
fast - HCCI - Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition
engines take advantages of this - controlled
knocking - By using homogeneous reaction instead of flame
propagation, conventional flammability/misfire
limits absent - Can burn very lean mixtures, low Tad, low peak
temperature, low NOx formation - Lean mixtures - can obtain part-load operation
without throttling and its losses - Since were asking for knock, use high
compression ratios, thus high ?th
19Comparison of gasoline, diesel HCCI
- http//www.osti.gov/fcvt/deer2001/coleman.pdf
20HCCI engines
- Much more difficult to control the rate and
timing of homogenous reaction than a propagating
spark-ignited flame various control schemes
being studied - Variable intake temperature
- Variable exhaust gas recirculation
- Variable compression ratio and valve timing
- Cycle-to-cycle control probably needed
http//www-cdr.stanford.edu/dynamic/hcci_control/h
cci.swf
21HCCI experiments in a single-cylinder engine
- http//www-cdr.stanford.edu/dynamic/hcci_control/M
ODELING_talk.pdf
22HCCI experiments in 6 cyl. engine (1 cyl. HCCI)
- http//www.orau.gov/deer/DEER2002/Session9/dec.pdf
23HCCI control using mixture ratio
- Shaver Gerdes, 2005
- Control peak pressure (minimize engine noise)
using closed-loop mixture ratio control
24HCCI control using mixture ratio
- Control peak pressure AND combustion timing (thus
efficiency) using mixture ratio intake valve
timing
25HCCI - disadvantages (opportunities?)
- Difficult to control timing and rate of
combustion - If misfire occurs, gas mixture during the next
cycle will be too cold for auto-ignition to
occur (unless intake air heating is used), the
engine will stop - Cold starting?
- Operating window for HCCI operation (load and
engine speed) is small - most HCCI concepts use
conventional spark-ignited operation at higher
loads (less lean mixtures) - Additional components for control system -
increased cost - Relatively high friction losses due to low IMEP,
thus friction loss is a higher of net work
(indicated work - friction)
26Microbial fuel cells
- Instead of combustion of fossil fuels to generate
electricity, why not use biological processes
that convert organic material into electron flow? - Use any handy organic material instead of refined
fossil fuel - Bacteria (prokaryotes) differ from eukaryotes in
the ability to use many different electron
acceptors (oxidants) electron donors (fuels) - Problem existing life forms are the result of a
3 billion year single elimination tournament and
did not evolve to serve at the pleasure of the
upstart homo sapiens - As a result, power attainable from existing
organisms is low! - Possible applications
- Sewage treatment - need to clean up organics
anyway, why not make electricity in the process - Autonomous micro air vehicles and ground sensors
- live off the land rather than require supply
chain
27Potential fuels and oxidants in nature
28Possible use of bacteria
Fuels (EDIBLES!!) SUNLIGHT
Glucose ORGANICS Ethanol
Formaldehyde
Methanol Hydrogen Ammonia Hydrogen
sulfide Sulfur Iron Manganese Carbon
monoxide Arsenite
Bugs eat and breathe anything!
Oxidants (BREATHABLES) ORGANICS fumarate,
DMSO TMAO Carbon dioxide Sulfur Sulfate Arsen
ate Selenite Iron Manganese Nitrate Oxygen
Asterisks indicate those that end up in rocks or
minerals (N does not, many others do!)
29Shewanella oneidensis
- Discovered in 1987 (Myers Nealson, 1988) in
sediments in Lake Oneida (upstate New York) - Energy source is lactic acid, hydrogen or
formaldehyde - Breathes rocks - manganese or iron oxides,
doesnt need O2
30Isolating Shewanella Oneidensis
- Shewanella have been shown to reduce solid oxides
(Myers Nealson,1988) - counter-intuitive when
discovered bacteria not known to reduced solid
substrates - Surface-related phenomenon catalysis of a new
kind
Enrichment Culture Five
Days Incubation
Pure Culture on MnO2
Breathing MnO2
31MFC with mediated electron transfer
e-
CH2O
O2 4 H 4 e- -? 2 H2O
EC
Bug
EC electron carrier methylene blue benzyl
viologen
CO2 H e-
H
Almost any bacterium can be made to generate
current this way
Cathode
Anode
Membrane
32Mediator-less MFC
- Shewanella strains and other metal reducers can
use a carbon electrode as an electron acceptor
(Kim, et al., 2002)
e-
CH2O
O2 4 H 4 e- ? 2 H2O
Direct e- flow
Bug
No EC added to anode
H
CO2 H e-
Very few bacteria can do this!
Cathode
Anode
Membrane
33Mediator-less MFC
34Testing organisms and mutants
- 0.002 moles of nutrient (lactate) added
- Time constant for consumption 15 hours
- Total current production of 8 coulombs
- 0.00022 moles of electrons
- Ratio lactate/electrons 101
Added 2mM lactate
Added MR-1 (no lactate)
Electrolyte (no MR-1)
35Comparison of different species in MFCs
36Results Current production
MR-1 mutant ?mtrA
MR-1 double mutant ?mtrC/ ?omcA
MR-1 mutant ?mtrB
37(No Transcript)
38Summary of MFC results
- Almost a perfect 11 correlation with the ability
to reduce iron MFC activity - All negative current cases share the absence of
MtrA MtrB - MtrE deletion results in 50 increase in current
production as well as rate of iron reduction - Formation of nanowires (!!!) (Gorby et al., 2005)
required for current production - electrical
conductivity of these wires has been proven,
though it hasnt been proven that they actually
conduct in MFCs
39MFC engineering at USC
Max. power density
200 mW/m2
0.2 mW/m2
0.2 mW/m2
22 mW/m2
FUN Science Physiology
Engineering
Date
- 30 mL volume
- Repeatable
- Air oxidant
- Aerobically grown MR-1, new media
- 30 mL volume
- Repeatable
- Air oxidant
- Anaerobically grown MR-1
MFC design
- 10 mL volume
- Unrepeatable
- Potassium ferricyanide oxidant
- 50 mL volume
- Real fuel cell design
40Possible design paradigm shift?
- O2 permeability of Nafion-117 at 25C
- 10-14 Mole/m-s-Pa
- Air cathode, 100 µm membrane
- ? 0.82 A/m2 current loss
- Trivial for PEM fuel cells using hydrogen,
methanol or formic acid (can get 1 A/cm2) but
critical for MFCs (1 A/m2) - Proton conductance of Nafion-117 at 25C
- 0.08 S/cm
- Results in 12 µV drop for 1 A/m2 - trivial for
MFCs (0.3 Volts OCV) - Results in 0.12 V drop for 1 A/cm2 - dominant for
CFCs - Conclusion CFCs have very different membrane
requirements than MFCs
Kocha et al. 2006
Siu et al. 2006
41Possible design exploiting MFC characteristics
- Resistive losses in Nafion not an issue for MFCs,
but O2 crossover is! - Could use different material with lower O2
permeability at the expense of lower proton
conductivity OR - Fin design using laminated Nafion
- Inner layers thicker than outer layers - protons
must be conducted farther - Greater anode than cathode area since anode
surface reaction rate is much smaller - Practically eliminate O2 crossover without
incurring significant voltage loss due to proton
resistance
42Summary - MFCs
- Microbes are highly adapted for electron transfer
- Strain MR-1 is very versatile metal reducer
- mtr genes are present in almost all metal
reducers tested thus far - Interaction with solid metal oxides requires
outer membrane enzymes - Microbial Fuel Cell activity is a good proxy for
metal ion reduction - Nanowires are apparently intimately connected
with the ability to reduce solid substrates - Engineers wanted
43References
- Gorby, Y., et al. (2005). Electrically
conductive bacterial nanowires produced by
Shewanella oneidensis strain MR-1 and other
microorganisms. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.,
10311358 11363. - Kim, B-H., et al. (2002). A mediator-less
microbial fuel cell using a metal reducing
bacterium, Shewanella putrefaciens Enzyme and
Microbial Technology 30, 145-152 - Kocha, S. S. Yang, J. D., Yi, J. S. (2006).
Characterization of Gas Crossover and Its
Implications in PEM Fuel Cells. AIChE J. 521916
1925. - D. Lieberman, J. Shepherd, F. Wang and M.
Gundersen (2005). Characterization of a Corona
Discharge Initiator Using Detonation Tube Impulse
Measurements, 43rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences
Meeting and Exhibit, Reno, NV, Jan. 10-13, 2005
(AIAA Paper 2005-1344). - Myers, C.R. Nealson, K.H. (1988) Bacterial
Manganese Reduction and Growth with Manganese
Oxide as the Sole Electron Receptor. Science
240, 1319-1321. - Siu, A., Schmeisser, J., Holdcroft, S. (2006).
Effect of Water on the Low Temperature
Conductivity of Polymer Electrolytes. J. Phys.
Chem. B. 6072 6080. - Theiss, N., Levin, J., Liu, J. B., Zhao, J.,
Wang, F., Ronney, P. D., Gundersen, M. A. (2005).
Transient Plasma Discharge Ignition for Internal
Combustion Engines. 4th Joint U.S. Sections
Meeting, Combustion Institute, Philadelphia, PA,
March 2005. - Wang, F., Liu, J. B., Sinibaldi, J., Brophy, C.,
Kuthi, A., Jiang, C., Ronney, P. D., Gundersen,
M. A. (2005). "Transient Plasma Ignition of
Quiescent and Flowing Fuel Mixtures, " IEEE
Transactions on Plasma Science, 33844-849.