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On nanosecond plasma-assisted ammonia combustion : Effects of pulse and mixture properties

Shahsavari, Mohammad ; Konnov, Alexander A. LU ; Valera-Medina, Agustin and Jangi, Mehdi (2022) In Combustion and Flame 245.
Abstract

In this study, the effects of nanosecond plasma discharges on the combustion characteristics of ammonia are investigated over a wide range of mixture properties and plasma settings. The results reveal that the impacts of the plasma on ammonia combustion change non-monotonically by altering the reduced electric field value. Within the studied range of the reduced electric field, i.e., 100–700 Td, it is shown that plasma is most effective in the medium range, e.g., 250–400 Td. At lower values, the main fraction of the plasma energy is consumed to excite the diluent to higher vibrational levels. At very high reduced electric field values, a substantial portion of the plasma energy is transferred into the ionization reactions of the... (More)

In this study, the effects of nanosecond plasma discharges on the combustion characteristics of ammonia are investigated over a wide range of mixture properties and plasma settings. The results reveal that the impacts of the plasma on ammonia combustion change non-monotonically by altering the reduced electric field value. Within the studied range of the reduced electric field, i.e., 100–700 Td, it is shown that plasma is most effective in the medium range, e.g., 250–400 Td. At lower values, the main fraction of the plasma energy is consumed to excite the diluent to higher vibrational levels. At very high reduced electric field values, a substantial portion of the plasma energy is transferred into the ionization reactions of the diluent, which compromises the effective excitations of fuel and oxidizer species. In terms of the pulse energy density, results indicate that an increase in the range of 0–20 mJ/cm3, at a given reduced electric field, decreases the ignition delay time by five orders of magnitude, and increases the laminar flame speed up to an order of magnitude, depending on the mixture composition. The results show that the plasma discharge produces more radicals, electronically excited and charged species when He is used as the diluent in the oxidizer instead of N2, since NH3 and O2 ionization reactions are strengthened in NH3/O2/He. Moreover, plasma discharge is highly effective in assisting the combustion of preheated lean mixtures. The present study also indicates that ammonia flame thickness is minimum at a critical pulse energy density in the range of 12–14 mJ/cm3. Further increases in the pulse energy density can manipulate the inner structure of the flame, altering the pre-heat zone of the flame to include some levels of chemical reactions toward the flameless mode of combustion.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Ammonia combustion, Nanosecond-pulsed plasma discharge, Plasma-assisted combustion
in
Combustion and Flame
volume
245
article number
112368
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85138075624
ISSN
0010-2180
DOI
10.1016/j.combustflame.2022.112368
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7c324930-ff5b-4401-9489-734de34df283
date added to LUP
2022-12-01 10:26:12
date last changed
2023-11-21 01:27:56
@article{7c324930-ff5b-4401-9489-734de34df283,
  abstract     = {{<p>In this study, the effects of nanosecond plasma discharges on the combustion characteristics of ammonia are investigated over a wide range of mixture properties and plasma settings. The results reveal that the impacts of the plasma on ammonia combustion change non-monotonically by altering the reduced electric field value. Within the studied range of the reduced electric field, i.e., 100–700 Td, it is shown that plasma is most effective in the medium range, e.g., 250–400 Td. At lower values, the main fraction of the plasma energy is consumed to excite the diluent to higher vibrational levels. At very high reduced electric field values, a substantial portion of the plasma energy is transferred into the ionization reactions of the diluent, which compromises the effective excitations of fuel and oxidizer species. In terms of the pulse energy density, results indicate that an increase in the range of 0–20 mJ/cm<sup>3</sup>, at a given reduced electric field, decreases the ignition delay time by five orders of magnitude, and increases the laminar flame speed up to an order of magnitude, depending on the mixture composition. The results show that the plasma discharge produces more radicals, electronically excited and charged species when He is used as the diluent in the oxidizer instead of N<sub>2</sub>, since NH<sub>3</sub> and O<sub>2</sub> ionization reactions are strengthened in NH<sub>3</sub>/O<sub>2</sub>/He. Moreover, plasma discharge is highly effective in assisting the combustion of preheated lean mixtures. The present study also indicates that ammonia flame thickness is minimum at a critical pulse energy density in the range of 12–14 mJ/cm<sup>3</sup>. Further increases in the pulse energy density can manipulate the inner structure of the flame, altering the pre-heat zone of the flame to include some levels of chemical reactions toward the flameless mode of combustion.</p>}},
  author       = {{Shahsavari, Mohammad and Konnov, Alexander A. and Valera-Medina, Agustin and Jangi, Mehdi}},
  issn         = {{0010-2180}},
  keywords     = {{Ammonia combustion; Nanosecond-pulsed plasma discharge; Plasma-assisted combustion}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Combustion and Flame}},
  title        = {{On nanosecond plasma-assisted ammonia combustion : Effects of pulse and mixture properties}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.combustflame.2022.112368}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.combustflame.2022.112368}},
  volume       = {{245}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}