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When ammonia addition increases the burning velocity of a fuel blend with nitromethane

Chen, Jundie LU and Konnov, Alexander A. LU (2025) In Combustion and Flame 277.
Abstract

Combustion properties and combustion chemistry of ammonia (NH₃) are significantly different from those of hydrocarbons and thus require further investigation. NH₃ combustion with oxidizers different from the ambient air can reveal distinct chemistry of NOx formation, which, together with low reactivity, is one of the major obstacles in the direct deployment of ammonia as a practical fuel. In the present study, ammonia was blended with nitromethane (CH₃NO₂), which was used as a nitric oxide (NO) precursor. The laminar burning velocities (LBV) of (CH₃NO₂+NH₃)+air mixtures were investigated across a wide range of NH₃ mole fractions in the fuel blends, from 0% to 80%, spanning fuel-lean to fuel-rich conditions, at an initial temperature of... (More)

Combustion properties and combustion chemistry of ammonia (NH₃) are significantly different from those of hydrocarbons and thus require further investigation. NH₃ combustion with oxidizers different from the ambient air can reveal distinct chemistry of NOx formation, which, together with low reactivity, is one of the major obstacles in the direct deployment of ammonia as a practical fuel. In the present study, ammonia was blended with nitromethane (CH₃NO₂), which was used as a nitric oxide (NO) precursor. The laminar burning velocities (LBV) of (CH₃NO₂+NH₃)+air mixtures were investigated across a wide range of NH₃ mole fractions in the fuel blends, from 0% to 80%, spanning fuel-lean to fuel-rich conditions, at an initial temperature of 338 K and 1 atm. The results show that adding NH₃ enhances the reactivity of CH₃NO₂ when the NH₃ fraction in the fuel is below 70%. A kinetic model of the authors was updated, primarily on CH₃NO₂ chemistry, and shows very good agreement with the measurements without any rate constants tuning. Detailed kinetic analyses based on the present model reveal that the reaction NH₂+NO[dbnd]NNH+OH significantly impacts the LBV even when a small portion of NH₃ is added to the fuel blend. NH₃ addition is found to increase adiabatic flame temperature and enrich the active radicals’ pools of H, OH, and O as well. The pathways of NH3 and NO interaction in (CH₃NO₂+NH₃)+air flames are also analyzed, enlightening NO conversion into N2 in the presence of ammonia.

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publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Ammonia, Kinetic model, Laminar burning velocity, Nitromethane
in
Combustion and Flame
volume
277
article number
114230
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:105004919016
ISSN
0010-2180
DOI
10.1016/j.combustflame.2025.114230
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
2d78eb4c-1390-4ee5-82a3-34ff04e9442f
date added to LUP
2025-07-17 09:37:35
date last changed
2025-07-17 09:38:25
@article{2d78eb4c-1390-4ee5-82a3-34ff04e9442f,
  abstract     = {{<p>Combustion properties and combustion chemistry of ammonia (NH₃) are significantly different from those of hydrocarbons and thus require further investigation. NH₃ combustion with oxidizers different from the ambient air can reveal distinct chemistry of NOx formation, which, together with low reactivity, is one of the major obstacles in the direct deployment of ammonia as a practical fuel. In the present study, ammonia was blended with nitromethane (CH₃NO₂), which was used as a nitric oxide (NO) precursor. The laminar burning velocities (LBV) of (CH₃NO₂+NH₃)+air mixtures were investigated across a wide range of NH₃ mole fractions in the fuel blends, from 0% to 80%, spanning fuel-lean to fuel-rich conditions, at an initial temperature of 338 K and 1 atm. The results show that adding NH₃ enhances the reactivity of CH₃NO₂ when the NH₃ fraction in the fuel is below 70%. A kinetic model of the authors was updated, primarily on CH₃NO₂ chemistry, and shows very good agreement with the measurements without any rate constants tuning. Detailed kinetic analyses based on the present model reveal that the reaction NH₂+NO[dbnd]NNH+OH significantly impacts the LBV even when a small portion of NH₃ is added to the fuel blend. NH₃ addition is found to increase adiabatic flame temperature and enrich the active radicals’ pools of H, OH, and O as well. The pathways of NH<sub>3</sub> and NO interaction in (CH₃NO₂+NH₃)+air flames are also analyzed, enlightening NO conversion into N<sub>2</sub> in the presence of ammonia.</p>}},
  author       = {{Chen, Jundie and Konnov, Alexander A.}},
  issn         = {{0010-2180}},
  keywords     = {{Ammonia; Kinetic model; Laminar burning velocity; Nitromethane}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Combustion and Flame}},
  title        = {{When ammonia addition increases the burning velocity of a fuel blend with nitromethane}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.combustflame.2025.114230}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.combustflame.2025.114230}},
  volume       = {{277}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}