Computational and experimental investigation of the interaction of soot and NO in coflow diffusion flames

2009 
Abstract A combined computational and experimental investigation that examines the relationship of soot formation and NO in coflow ethylene air diffusion flames is presented. While both NO and soot formation are often studied independently, there is a need to understand their coupled relationship as a function of system parameters such as fuel type, temperature and pressure. The temperature decrease due to radiative losses in systems in which significant soot is produced can affect flame length and other temperature-dependent processes such as the formation of NO. The results of a computational model that includes a sectional representation for soot formation with a radiation model are compared against laser-induced fluorescence measurements of NO. The sooting characteristics of these flames have been studied previously. Experimentally, a laser near 225.8 nm is used to excite the γ (0, 0) band in NO. Spectrally resolved fluorescence emission is imaged radially, for the (0, 0), (0, 1), (0, 2), (0, 3), and (0, 4) vibrational bands, at varying axial heights to create a two-dimensional image of NO fluorescence. A reverse quenching correction is applied to the computational results to determine an expected fluorescence signal for comparison with experimental results. Modeling results confirm that Fenimore NO is the dominant mechanism for NO production and suggest that for lightly sooting flames (peak soot volume fraction
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