Influence of Coal Dust on Premixed Turbulent Methane-Air Flames

"The hazard associated with dust deflagrations has increased over the last decade industries that manufacture, transport, process, or use combustible dusts. Identification of the controlling parameters of dust deflagration mechanisms is crucial to our understanding of the problem. The objective...

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Main Author: Rockwell, Scott
Other Authors: Alfonso F. Ibarreta, Committee Member
Format: Others
Published: Digital WPI 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/343
https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1342&context=etd-dissertations
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spelling ndltd-wpi.edu-oai-digitalcommons.wpi.edu-etd-dissertations-13422019-03-22T05:43:40Z Influence of Coal Dust on Premixed Turbulent Methane-Air Flames Rockwell, Scott "The hazard associated with dust deflagrations has increased over the last decade industries that manufacture, transport, process, or use combustible dusts. Identification of the controlling parameters of dust deflagration mechanisms is crucial to our understanding of the problem. The objective of this study is to develop an experimental platform, called the Hybrid Flame Analyzer (HFA), capable of measuring the laminar and turbulent burning velocity of gas, dust, and hybrid (gas and dust) air premixed flames as a function of properties specific to the reactants such as dust-particle size and concentration. In this work the HFA is used to analyze a particle-gas-air premixed system composed of coal dust particles (75-90 µm and 106-120 µm) in a premixed CH4-air ( = 0.8, 1.0 and 1.2) flame. This work ultimately aims to improve the knowledge on fundamental aspects of dust flames which is essential for the development of mathematical models. This study is the first of its kind where multiple different parameters that govern flame propagation (initial particle radius, particle concentration, gas phase equivalence ratio, turbulent intensity, and integral length scale) are systematically analyzed in a spatially uniform cloud of volatile particles forming a stationary flame. The experiments show that the turbulent burning velocity is more than two-times larger than the laminar counter-part for each and every case studied. It is observed that smaller particles and larger concentrations (> 50 g/m3) tend to enhance the turbulent burning velocity significantly compared to larger particle sizes and lower concentration ranges. The experimental data is used to develop a correlation similar to turbulent gas flames to facilitate modeling of the complex behavior. " 2012-08-14T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/343 https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1342&context=etd-dissertations Doctoral Dissertations (All Dissertations, All Years) Digital WPI Alfonso F. Ibarreta, Committee Member Simon W. Evans, Committee Member Forman A. Williams, Committee Member Sanjeeva Balasuriya, Committee Member Kathy A. Notarianni, Committee Member Ali S. Rangwala, Advisor experimental technique turbulent burning velocity coal
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic experimental technique
turbulent burning velocity
coal
spellingShingle experimental technique
turbulent burning velocity
coal
Rockwell, Scott
Influence of Coal Dust on Premixed Turbulent Methane-Air Flames
description "The hazard associated with dust deflagrations has increased over the last decade industries that manufacture, transport, process, or use combustible dusts. Identification of the controlling parameters of dust deflagration mechanisms is crucial to our understanding of the problem. The objective of this study is to develop an experimental platform, called the Hybrid Flame Analyzer (HFA), capable of measuring the laminar and turbulent burning velocity of gas, dust, and hybrid (gas and dust) air premixed flames as a function of properties specific to the reactants such as dust-particle size and concentration. In this work the HFA is used to analyze a particle-gas-air premixed system composed of coal dust particles (75-90 µm and 106-120 µm) in a premixed CH4-air ( = 0.8, 1.0 and 1.2) flame. This work ultimately aims to improve the knowledge on fundamental aspects of dust flames which is essential for the development of mathematical models. This study is the first of its kind where multiple different parameters that govern flame propagation (initial particle radius, particle concentration, gas phase equivalence ratio, turbulent intensity, and integral length scale) are systematically analyzed in a spatially uniform cloud of volatile particles forming a stationary flame. The experiments show that the turbulent burning velocity is more than two-times larger than the laminar counter-part for each and every case studied. It is observed that smaller particles and larger concentrations (> 50 g/m3) tend to enhance the turbulent burning velocity significantly compared to larger particle sizes and lower concentration ranges. The experimental data is used to develop a correlation similar to turbulent gas flames to facilitate modeling of the complex behavior. "
author2 Alfonso F. Ibarreta, Committee Member
author_facet Alfonso F. Ibarreta, Committee Member
Rockwell, Scott
author Rockwell, Scott
author_sort Rockwell, Scott
title Influence of Coal Dust on Premixed Turbulent Methane-Air Flames
title_short Influence of Coal Dust on Premixed Turbulent Methane-Air Flames
title_full Influence of Coal Dust on Premixed Turbulent Methane-Air Flames
title_fullStr Influence of Coal Dust on Premixed Turbulent Methane-Air Flames
title_full_unstemmed Influence of Coal Dust on Premixed Turbulent Methane-Air Flames
title_sort influence of coal dust on premixed turbulent methane-air flames
publisher Digital WPI
publishDate 2012
url https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/343
https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1342&context=etd-dissertations
work_keys_str_mv AT rockwellscott influenceofcoaldustonpremixedturbulentmethaneairflames
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