Shock tube study of normal heptane first-stage ignition near 3.5 atm

2018 
Abstract Shock tube ignition delay times and species time history measurements for Primary Reference Fuels (PRFs) such as normal heptane provide targets for the validation of combustion models, which in turn are used to develop more fuel-efficient engines that have smaller environmental footprints. However, a review of the literature has revealed that most of the shock tube ignition delay time and species measurement data for normal heptane have been obtained at elevated pressures, rather than at relatively low pressures where many other important experimental techniques such as jet-stirred reactors and flow reactors can provide corroborating results. One central problem preventing previous shock tube studies from examining first-stage ignition at these lower pressures was that ignition times were too long under these conditions to be measured within the available shock tube test times. To address this issue, recent advances in shock tube techniques for achieving long uniform test times have been applied in order to measure low-pressure first-stage ignition times of normal heptane together with normal heptane fuel time-history records at times up to about 30 ms. These measurements were performed in the Negative Temperature Coefficient (NTC) region ( T = 664 − 792  K) in lean mixtures (21%O 2 /Ar, equivalence ratio ϕ = 0.5 ) at pressures of roughly P = 3.5  atm using both the conventional and Constrained Reaction Volume (CRV) shock tube filling strategies. The data have been used to evaluate the performance of several combustion models, have been compared with other higher-pressure shock tube first-stage ignition times in n -heptane/20–21%O 2 mixtures found in the literature, and have been fit using a two-zone Arrhenius model for first-stage ignition delay times. The results showed that some combustion models yield ignition delay time predictions that differ from the experimental results by as much as an order of magnitude, that under these conditions n -heptane first-stage ignition times scale by roughly P − 0.71 but are insensitive to ϕ , and that the fraction of fuel remaining after first-stage ignition increases with increasing initial experimental temperature.
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