Effects of electric field intensity and distribution on flame propagation speed of CH4/O2/N2 flames

Hao Duan, Xiaomin Wu, Tianqi Sun, Bing Liu, Jianfeng Fang, Chao Li, Zhongquan Gao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Abstract In order to study the effects of electric field intensity and distribution on flame propagation speed, the paper investigated the flame propagation of premixed CH4/O2/N2 mixtures under direct-current (DC) electric fields at an excess air ratio of 1.4. Different high-voltage electrodes were chosen in the experiment in two aspects: electrodes size (the outer-diameter of high-voltage electrodes) and electrodes structure. Results show that the flame propagation speed increases significantly with the voltage applied to the high-voltage electrodes. Secondly, the electric field intensity can significantly affect the flame propagation, and it can be observed that the mean flame propagation speed increases linearly with the mean electric field intensity under fixed high-voltage electrodes. In addition, electric field distribution is another important influence factor on the flame propagation. Specifically, flame propagation speed increases apparently with the uniformity coefficient of the applied electric field, so a uniform electric field works better than an uneven one for promoting the flame propagation speed. In fact, with the smallest uniformity coefficient of 0.21, the electric field under the 60 mm-diameter mesh electrodes has the most uniform electric field, while the effect of that on the flame propagation is the strongest, with the highest mean flame propagation speed of 1.25 m/s at an applied voltage of -10 kV. The results substantiate the importance of the electric field intensity and distribution on promoting the flame propagation speed of lean combustion.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9295
Pages (from-to)807-815
Number of pages9
JournalFuel
Volume158
DOIs
StatePublished - 25 Jun 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Electric field intensity and distribution
  • Electrodes size
  • Electrodes structure
  • Flame propagation speed
  • Uniformity coefficient

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