Effect of Heat Transfer Peculiarities on Ignition and Combustion Behavior of Al Nanoparticles

Nanoenergetic materials have some advantages against micrometric and bulk materials. This is due to enhanced surface area and intimacy between reactive components that leads to increase in the reaction rate and decrease in the ignition delay. However, till now there is very limited understanding of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vladimir Zarko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: al-Farabi Kazakh National University 2016-09-01
Series:Eurasian Chemico-Technological Journal 
Online Access:http://ect-journal.kz/index.php/ectj/article/view/211
id doaj-1cfd9c4a3dd8470984ae0483b8a85c38
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1cfd9c4a3dd8470984ae0483b8a85c382020-11-24T23:48:13Zengal-Farabi Kazakh National UniversityEurasian Chemico-Technological Journal 1562-39202522-48672016-09-0118317117910.18321/ectj423211Effect of Heat Transfer Peculiarities on Ignition and Combustion Behavior of Al NanoparticlesVladimir Zarko0Voevodsky Institute of Chemical Kinetics and Combustion, 3, Institutskaya Str., Novosibirsk 630090, RussiaNanoenergetic materials have some advantages against micrometric and bulk materials. This is due to enhanced surface area and intimacy between reactive components that leads to increase in the reaction rate and decrease in the ignition delay. However, till now there is very limited understanding of fundamental physical processes that control reaction and combustion wave propagation. The heat transfer in the case of nanoparticles is characterized some specifi c features which determine the sometime unusual ignition and combustion behavior. The paper is focused on discussing the ignition and combustion of nano Al particles in conditions of a shock tube and in a plastic tube. It is shown that tiny metal particles at high temperatures and pressures become “thermally isolated” from ambient gas environment and experimentally observed ignition delays may be two order magnitudes longer of those calculated without accounting real energy accommodation and sticking coeffi cients. When going to conditions of reaction propagation in a plastic tube, some different ways for heat transfer have to be carefully analyzed. Actually, there are no evidences for unique dominant process which may provide propagation of combustion wave with observed speed through the loose Al/CuO particles mixture. It can be stated that the process comprises 2 stages with very fast ignition, releasing large amount of heat and propelling hot gas and condensed material in direction of unreacted mixture followed by more slow reaction of remaining metal with evolved in oxide decomposition oxygen. Common conclusion is that further detailed studying the fundamental properties of nanoenergetics materials and their reaction behavior may open ways for purposed control of the combustion behavior and for effective use of nanoenergetics in practical applications.http://ect-journal.kz/index.php/ectj/article/view/211
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vladimir Zarko
spellingShingle Vladimir Zarko
Effect of Heat Transfer Peculiarities on Ignition and Combustion Behavior of Al Nanoparticles
Eurasian Chemico-Technological Journal 
author_facet Vladimir Zarko
author_sort Vladimir Zarko
title Effect of Heat Transfer Peculiarities on Ignition and Combustion Behavior of Al Nanoparticles
title_short Effect of Heat Transfer Peculiarities on Ignition and Combustion Behavior of Al Nanoparticles
title_full Effect of Heat Transfer Peculiarities on Ignition and Combustion Behavior of Al Nanoparticles
title_fullStr Effect of Heat Transfer Peculiarities on Ignition and Combustion Behavior of Al Nanoparticles
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Heat Transfer Peculiarities on Ignition and Combustion Behavior of Al Nanoparticles
title_sort effect of heat transfer peculiarities on ignition and combustion behavior of al nanoparticles
publisher al-Farabi Kazakh National University
series Eurasian Chemico-Technological Journal 
issn 1562-3920
2522-4867
publishDate 2016-09-01
description Nanoenergetic materials have some advantages against micrometric and bulk materials. This is due to enhanced surface area and intimacy between reactive components that leads to increase in the reaction rate and decrease in the ignition delay. However, till now there is very limited understanding of fundamental physical processes that control reaction and combustion wave propagation. The heat transfer in the case of nanoparticles is characterized some specifi c features which determine the sometime unusual ignition and combustion behavior. The paper is focused on discussing the ignition and combustion of nano Al particles in conditions of a shock tube and in a plastic tube. It is shown that tiny metal particles at high temperatures and pressures become “thermally isolated” from ambient gas environment and experimentally observed ignition delays may be two order magnitudes longer of those calculated without accounting real energy accommodation and sticking coeffi cients. When going to conditions of reaction propagation in a plastic tube, some different ways for heat transfer have to be carefully analyzed. Actually, there are no evidences for unique dominant process which may provide propagation of combustion wave with observed speed through the loose Al/CuO particles mixture. It can be stated that the process comprises 2 stages with very fast ignition, releasing large amount of heat and propelling hot gas and condensed material in direction of unreacted mixture followed by more slow reaction of remaining metal with evolved in oxide decomposition oxygen. Common conclusion is that further detailed studying the fundamental properties of nanoenergetics materials and their reaction behavior may open ways for purposed control of the combustion behavior and for effective use of nanoenergetics in practical applications.
url http://ect-journal.kz/index.php/ectj/article/view/211
work_keys_str_mv AT vladimirzarko effectofheattransferpeculiaritiesonignitionandcombustionbehaviorofalnanoparticles
_version_ 1725486699908169728