Shock Tube Measurements of Ignition Processes and Spray-Shock Wave Interactions

Shock Tube Measurements of Ignition Processes and Spray-Shock Wave Interactions
Title Shock Tube Measurements of Ignition Processes and Spray-Shock Wave Interactions PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 26
Release 2008
Genre
ISBN

Download Shock Tube Measurements of Ignition Processes and Spray-Shock Wave Interactions Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

We report results of high-temperature shock tube research aimed at improving knowledge of the combustion behavior of diesel, jet and related fuels. Research was conducted in four Stanford shock tube facilities and focused on the following topics: (1) development of the aerosol shock tube; (2) ignition delay time measurements of gaseous jet fuels (JP-8 and Jet-A) and surrogate components at high pressures and low temperatures; (3) laser absorption measurements of species time-histories for OH radicals and alkanes; (4) ignition delay times of n-dodecane, jet fuel and diesel using the aerosol shock tube technique; and (5) improving shock tube performance and modeling.

Shock Tubes and Waves

Shock Tubes and Waves
Title Shock Tubes and Waves PDF eBook
Author Charles E. Treanor
Publisher State University of New York Press
Pages 908
Release 1982-06-30
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 1438405502

Download Shock Tubes and Waves Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Sponsored by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research, this conference was held in Niagara Falls on July 6–9, 1981. This book includes material on the following topics: instrumentation and diagnostics, shock tube facilities and techniques, gas dynamic experiments, heat transfer and real gas effects, boundary layers, shock structure, shock propagation, laser and spectral optical studies, chem and kinetics, relaxation and excitation, ionization, dusty gases, two-phase flow and condensation, shock waves in the environment and energy, and energy-related processes. The book contains a total of 98 papers by well-known specialists.

The Development and Application of Aerosol Shock Tube Methods for the Study of Low-vapor-pressure Fuels

The Development and Application of Aerosol Shock Tube Methods for the Study of Low-vapor-pressure Fuels
Title The Development and Application of Aerosol Shock Tube Methods for the Study of Low-vapor-pressure Fuels PDF eBook
Author Daniel Robert Haylett
Publisher Stanford University
Pages 169
Release 2011
Genre
ISBN

Download The Development and Application of Aerosol Shock Tube Methods for the Study of Low-vapor-pressure Fuels Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This thesis describes a new facility and method of experimentation, which can be used to study the combustion chemistry of low-volatility fuels in the gas phase. Two main goals are described: first, the development of the aerosol shock tube and procedures; and second, a demonstration of its capabilities. There is a lack of high-quality, accurate chemical kinetics data for the oxidation of large hydrocarbons, which are important for modeling diesel, rocket, or jet engines among other combustion systems. While conventional shock tubes are very effective reactor vessels for low-molecular-weight gaseous fuels (n-alkanes up to five carbon atoms), larger fuel molecules exist as low-volatility liquids/solids, and the vapor-pressures of these fuels are not large enough for high or even moderate fuel loadings. Heating the shock tube has extended the use of shock tubes to carbon numbers of 10 to 12, but beyond that, the high temperatures prior to the shock initiation can decompose the fuel, and (for fuel mixtures like diesel) can cause fractional distillation. The question is then: how can we study low-vapor-pressure fuels in a shock tube? The solution presented here, which avoids the problems associated with heating, is called the aerosol shock tube. In the aerosol shock tube, the fuel is injected as an aerosol of micron-size droplets. Then a series of shock waves first evaporate the fuel and subsequently raise the resultant purely gas-phase mixture to combustion-relevant temperatures. With proper selection of the shock strength and timing, this process effectively decouples the mass and heat transfer processes associated with evaporation from the chemical mechanism of combustion. This enables the study of extremely low-volatility fuels, never before studied in a purely gas-phase form in a shock tube. The first application of this new facility was to measure the ignition delay time for many previously inaccessible fuels in the gas-phase. In this thesis, we have measured ignition delay times for the pure surrogate fuel components n-decane, n-dodecane, n-hexadecane, and methyl decanoate as well as for multi-component fuels such as JP-7 and multiple different blends of diesel fuel. Taken over a range of conditions, these measurements provide sensitive validation targets for their respective chemical mechanisms. These data showed agreement with past heated shock tube experiments for fuels in which premature fuel decomposition is not an issue (n-decane and low concentration n-dodecane). However, when comparing heated and aerosol shock tube ignition delay times for fuels that require significant heating, like n-hexadecane, the existing heated shock tube data demonstrated evidence of premature decomposition. The second application to the study of chemical kinetics was to measure the concentration of important species during the decomposition and oxidation of select low-vapor-pressure fuels. These species time-histories provide much more information for kinetic mechanism refinement. Experiments were performed to measure the important OH radical and the stable intermediate C2H4 for both n-hexadecane and diesel. The number of important low-vapor-pressure fuels that require high-quality validation targets is large, and our new method for providing this data has proven very effective. This work enables the development of the next generation of accurate chemical mechanisms and will be essential to their success.

Development of an Aerosol Loading Technique for Ignition Time Measurements in Shock Tubes

Development of an Aerosol Loading Technique for Ignition Time Measurements in Shock Tubes
Title Development of an Aerosol Loading Technique for Ignition Time Measurements in Shock Tubes PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 23
Release 2007
Genre
ISBN

Download Development of an Aerosol Loading Technique for Ignition Time Measurements in Shock Tubes Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

We have developed a new aerosol loading technique to be used in shock tube measurements of combustion kinetics, in particular ignition times, of low-vapor pressure fuels. This technique provides a uniform spatial distribution of aerosol in the shock tube, which ensures well-behaved shock-induced flows and a narrow micron-sized aerosol size distribution that rapidly evaporates, thereby providing the capability to produce high-concentration vapor mixtures derived from a wide variety of fluids including low-vapor-pressure practical fuels and fuel surrogates. At present we utilize the incident shock wave to vaporize the fuel droplets, and the reflected shock wave to induce chemical reaction. We report here the first aerosol shock tube ignition delay time measurements of n-dodecane/O2/argon mixtures. These measurements are found to be consistent with those made in our heated shock tube facility.

Numerical Modeling of the Shock Tube Flow Fields Before and During Ignition Delay Time Experiments at Practical Conditions

Numerical Modeling of the Shock Tube Flow Fields Before and During Ignition Delay Time Experiments at Practical Conditions
Title Numerical Modeling of the Shock Tube Flow Fields Before and During Ignition Delay Time Experiments at Practical Conditions PDF eBook
Author Mouna Lamnaouer
Publisher
Pages 219
Release 2010
Genre Computational fluid dynamics
ISBN

Download Numerical Modeling of the Shock Tube Flow Fields Before and During Ignition Delay Time Experiments at Practical Conditions Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

An axi-symmetric shock-tube model has been developed to simulate the shock-wave propagation and reflection in both non-reactive and reactive flows. Simulations were performed for the full shock-tube geometry of the high-pressure shock tube facility at Texas A & M University. Computations were carried out in the CFD solver FLUENT based on the finite volume approach and the AUSM+ flux differencing scheme. Adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) algorithm was applied to the time-dependent flow fields to accurately capture and resolve the shock and contact discontinuities as well as the very fine scales associated with the viscous and reactive effects. A conjugate heat transfer model has been incorporated which enhanced the credibility of the simulations. The multi-dimensional, time-dependent numerical simulations resolved all of the relevant scales, ranging from the size of the system to the reaction zone scale. The robustness of the numerical model and the accuracy of the simulations were assessed through validation with the analytical ideal shock-tube theory and experimental data. The numerical method is first applied to the problem of axi-symmetric inviscid flow then viscous effects are incorporated through viscous modeling. The non-idealities in the shock tube have been investigated and quantified, notably the non-ideal transient behavior in the shock tube nozzle section, heat transfer effects from the hot gas to the shock tube side walls, the reflected shock/boundary layer interactions or what is known as bifurcation, and the contact surface/bifurcation interaction resulting into driver gas contamination. The non-reactive model is shown to be capable of accurately simulating the shock and expansion wave propagations and reflections as well as the flow non-uniformities behind the reflected shock wave. Both the inviscid and the viscous non-reactive models provided a baseline for the combustion model iii which involves elementary chemical reactions and requires the coupling of the chemistry with the flow fields adding to the complexity of the problem and thereby requiring tremendous computational resources. Combustion modeling focuses on the ignition process behind the reflected shock wave in undiluted and diluted Hydrogen test gas mixtures. Accurate representation of the Shock-tube reactive flow fields is more likely to be achieved by the means of the LES model in conjunction with the EDC model. The shock-tube CFD model developed herein provides valuable information to the interpretation of the shock-tube experimental data and to the understanding of the impact the facility-dependent non-idealities can have on the ignition delay time measurements.

The Development and Application of Aerosol Shock Tube Methods for the Study of Low-vapor-pressure Fuels

The Development and Application of Aerosol Shock Tube Methods for the Study of Low-vapor-pressure Fuels
Title The Development and Application of Aerosol Shock Tube Methods for the Study of Low-vapor-pressure Fuels PDF eBook
Author Daniel Robert Haylett
Publisher
Pages
Release 2011
Genre
ISBN

Download The Development and Application of Aerosol Shock Tube Methods for the Study of Low-vapor-pressure Fuels Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This thesis describes a new facility and method of experimentation, which can be used to study the combustion chemistry of low-volatility fuels in the gas phase. Two main goals are described: first, the development of the aerosol shock tube and procedures; and second, a demonstration of its capabilities. There is a lack of high-quality, accurate chemical kinetics data for the oxidation of large hydrocarbons, which are important for modeling diesel, rocket, or jet engines among other combustion systems. While conventional shock tubes are very effective reactor vessels for low-molecular-weight gaseous fuels (n-alkanes up to five carbon atoms), larger fuel molecules exist as low-volatility liquids/solids, and the vapor-pressures of these fuels are not large enough for high or even moderate fuel loadings. Heating the shock tube has extended the use of shock tubes to carbon numbers of 10 to 12, but beyond that, the high temperatures prior to the shock initiation can decompose the fuel, and (for fuel mixtures like diesel) can cause fractional distillation. The question is then: how can we study low-vapor-pressure fuels in a shock tube? The solution presented here, which avoids the problems associated with heating, is called the aerosol shock tube. In the aerosol shock tube, the fuel is injected as an aerosol of micron-size droplets. Then a series of shock waves first evaporate the fuel and subsequently raise the resultant purely gas-phase mixture to combustion-relevant temperatures. With proper selection of the shock strength and timing, this process effectively decouples the mass and heat transfer processes associated with evaporation from the chemical mechanism of combustion. This enables the study of extremely low-volatility fuels, never before studied in a purely gas-phase form in a shock tube. The first application of this new facility was to measure the ignition delay time for many previously inaccessible fuels in the gas-phase. In this thesis, we have measured ignition delay times for the pure surrogate fuel components n-decane, n-dodecane, n-hexadecane, and methyl decanoate as well as for multi-component fuels such as JP-7 and multiple different blends of diesel fuel. Taken over a range of conditions, these measurements provide sensitive validation targets for their respective chemical mechanisms. These data showed agreement with past heated shock tube experiments for fuels in which premature fuel decomposition is not an issue (n-decane and low concentration n-dodecane). However, when comparing heated and aerosol shock tube ignition delay times for fuels that require significant heating, like n-hexadecane, the existing heated shock tube data demonstrated evidence of premature decomposition. The second application to the study of chemical kinetics was to measure the concentration of important species during the decomposition and oxidation of select low-vapor-pressure fuels. These species time-histories provide much more information for kinetic mechanism refinement. Experiments were performed to measure the important OH radical and the stable intermediate C2H4 for both n-hexadecane and diesel. The number of important low-vapor-pressure fuels that require high-quality validation targets is large, and our new method for providing this data has proven very effective. This work enables the development of the next generation of accurate chemical mechanisms and will be essential to their success.

Shock Wave Science and Technology Reference Library, Vol.4

Shock Wave Science and Technology Reference Library, Vol.4
Title Shock Wave Science and Technology Reference Library, Vol.4 PDF eBook
Author F. Zhang
Publisher Springer Science & Business Media
Pages 407
Release 2009-06-12
Genre Science
ISBN 3540884475

Download Shock Wave Science and Technology Reference Library, Vol.4 Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The fourth of several volumes on solids in this series, the six extensive chapters here are more specifically concerned with detonation and shock compression waves in reactive heterogeneous media, including mixtures of solid, liquid and gas phases.