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Extended adiabatic flame temperature method for lower flammability limits prediction of fuel-air-diluent mixture by nonstoichiometric equation and nitrogen equivalent coefficients Runzhao Li, Zhongchang Liu, Yongqiang Han, Manzhi Tan, Yun Xu, Jing Tian, Jiahong Chai, and Jiahui Liu Energy Fuels, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.6b02459 • Publication Date (Web): 09 Dec 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 10, 2016
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Energy & Fuels
1
Extended adiabatic flame temperature method for lower flammability limits
2
prediction of fuel-air-diluent mixture by non-stoichiometric equation and nitrogen
3
equivalent coefficients
4 5
Runzhao Li, Zhongchang Liu, Yongqiang Han, Manzhi Tan*, Yun Xu, Jing Tian, Jiahong Chai, Jiahui
6
Liu
7
State Key Laboratory of Automotive Simulation and Control, Jilin University, Changchun 130025, China
8 9
ABSTRACT
10 11
The extended adiabatic flame temperature method aims at predicting the lower flammability limits of
12
fuel-air-diluent mixtures (including fuel mixtures and diluent mixtures) by nonstoichiometric equation
13
and nitrogen equivalent coefficients. A cubic function is introduced to describe the relation between the
14
critical adiabatic flame temperature and inert volume concentration. This method applies to ten
15
compounds including methane, propane, iso-octane, ethylene, acetylene, benzene, methanol, dimethyl
16
ether, methyl formate and acetone for validation. A well agreement is obtained between the predicted and
17
measured value that the average relative deviations are all below 3.6%. The sources of error mainly
18
attribute to three causes: First, the adiabatic flame temperature method does not regard for the heat losses
19
from flame front to surroundings. Second, the test method and determined criterion both have a
*
Corresponding author.
E-mail address:
[email protected] (M. Tan). 1
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significant impact on the experimental data. Third, the functional relationship between adiabatic flame
21
temperature and inert concentration also influences the exactness.
22 23 24
Highlights:
25
26
The extended adiabatic flame temperature method aims at predicting lower flammability limits of fuel-air-diluent mixture.
27
The proposed method can apply to substances which containing C-H-O-N atoms.
28
The proposed method is capable of processing diluent mixtures by nitrogen equivalent
29 30
coefficients.
31 32
A cubic function is introduced to describe the relation between adiabatic flame temperature and inert concentration.
The average relative deviations for lower flammability limits estimation are all below 3.6%.
33 34 35
Keywords:
36
Lower flammability limits; Fuel-air-diluent mixture; Extended adiabatic flame temperature method;
37
Non-stoichiometric equation; Nitrogen equivalent coefficients.
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Energy & Fuels
Nomenclature
a0 , a1 , a2 , a3
empirical coefficients of heat capacity
Ai
mole fraction of the i th fuel in the mixture
Bj
mole fraction of the j th diluent in the mixture
cinert
inert gas concentration (vol%)
cp
heat capacity at constant pressure (J∙mol-1∙K-1)
c p ,l
heat capacity at constant pressure of products (J∙mol-1∙K-1)
C
mole fraction of the air in the mixture (vol%)
Fueli
the i th fuel in the mixture
H c , i
heat of combustion of the i th fuel (J/mol)
H i , reactants
enthalpy of the i th reactant (J)
H j , products
enthalpy of the j th product (J)
H 0f ,i , reactants
heat of formation of the i th reactants at standard condition (J/mol)
H 0f , j , products
heat of formation of the j th products at standard condition (J/mol)
Inert j
the j th diluent in the mixture
Kk
nitrogen equivalent coefficients
M
molecular weight (kg/kmol)
p,q,r,s
empirical coefficients of adiabatic flame temperature at lower flammability limit
P
gas pressure (Pa)
R
conventional gas constant (J∙mol-1∙K-1)
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R2
correlation coefficient
SS E
sum of squares of residuals
SS T
sum of squares
Tad
adiabatic flame temperature of products (K)
Tad , LFL
adiabatic flame temperature at lower flammability limit (K)
Ti
initial temperature of reactants (K)
xf
mole fraction of combustible (vol%)
xC ,equiv
the number of carbon atoms in the equivalent fuel
xH ,equiv
the number of hydrogen atoms in the equivalent fuel
xO ,equiv
the number of oxygen atoms in the equivalent fuel
xN ,equiv
the number of nitrogen atoms in the equivalent fuel
xC ,i
the number of carbon atoms in the i th fuel
xH , i
the number of hydrogen atoms in the i th fuel
xO ,i
the number of oxygen atoms in the i th fuel
xN ,i
the number of nitrogen atoms in the i th fuel
xL
lower flammability limit (vol%)
xL ,exp
lower flammability limit derived from experimental data (vol%)
xL ,calc
lower flammability limit derived from calculated data (vol%)
x st
stoichiometric concentration (vol%)
yi
mole fraction of the i th fuel in the fuel mixture (vol%)
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Energy & Fuels
Greek letters λ
nitrogen/oxygen molar ratio
equivalence ratio
vair
stoichiometric concentration of air
air
coefficient of air in non-stoichiometric equation
CO
coefficient of carbon dioxide in non-stoichiometric equation
H O
coefficient of water in non-stoichiometric equation
N
coefficient of nitrogen in non-stoichiometric equation
2
2
O
2
2
coefficient of oxygen in non-stoichiometric equation
l
coefficient of products
vi , reactants
mole fraction of the i th reactant (vol%)
v j , products
mole fraction of the j th product (vol%)
δ
vapor specific gravity
Abbreviations AAD
average absolute difference (vol%)
AD
absolute difference (vol%)
ARD
average relative deviation (%)
LFL
lower flammability limit (vol%)
MAD
maximum absolute difference (vol%)
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MOC
minimum oxygen concentration (vol%)
MRD
maximum relative deviation (%)
RD
relative deviation (%)
UFL
upper flammability limit (vol%)
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Energy & Fuels
1. INTRODUCTION
40
Many apparatuses used in the chemical and petrochemical processes contain hazardous materials that
41
are flammable in air. As a result, the flammability limit is one of the important physical properties of the
42
flammable substances and it is necessary to evaluate the fire potential by experimental measurement and
43
theoretical derivation. According to the definitions of standard ASTM E681-09 1, the lower/upper
44
flammability limits (LFL/UFL) denote the minimum/maximum concentration of a combustible substance
45
that is capable of self-sustaining a flame propagation in a homogeneous mixture which involves
46
combustible and air under specific condition. The flame propagation has different determined criterions
47
according to the requirement of specific standard test method. Both ASTM E681-09
48
10156:2010
49
criterions in industry. Meanwhile, Bureau of Mines in America has performed extensive research on the
50
subject of explosion limits and summarized the flammability characteristics of gases and vapors
51
including paraffins, olefins, cycloparaffins, acetylenes, aromatic compounds, alcohols, aldehydes, ethers,
52
ketones, organic acids, organic salts, sulfur compounds and fuel blends 3-5.
2
1
and ISO
standards are a set of widely-accepted flammability limits test methods and determined
53
There are four significant challenges concerning flammability limits estimation which lists as below:
54
1.
To estimate the flammability limits of fuel-air-diluent mixture at ambient temperature and pressure.
55
2.
To estimate the flammability limits of fuel-air-diluent mixtures which containing various types of
56
fuels and diluents.
57
3.
To estimate the flammability limits of fuel-air-diluent mixtures as a function of temperature.
58
4.
To estimate the flammability limits of fuel-air-diluent mixtures as a function of pressure.
59
From the first category, many published references concerned the flammability limits of fuel-air
60
mixture without taking inert gases into account
6-10
. However, these data are easily available among
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thousands of combustible from reference books, articles, websites, manuals, bulletins etc. 3-5, 11-16. Indeed,
62
removing all flammable mixtures or ignition sources is an effective measure to avoid the explosion hazard.
63
Nevertheless, it is unrealistic, combustible mixtures and ignition sources regularly present in industrial
64
operation. In processing industry, inert gases usually add into flammable mixture to reduce the explosion
65
potential 4. From the second category, the fuel and diluent mentioned above can be fuel mixtures and
66
diluent mixtures respectively in the practice of chemical safety and loss prevention
67
of inert gases affects both the upper and lower flammability limits. The existence of inert gases affects
68
both the upper and lower flammability limits. Rare data about flammability limits for fuel-air-diluent
69
mixtures is available in literature 21. Therefore, to investigate the flammability limits of fuel-air mixture
70
diluted with inert gases is of tremendous interest. Likewise, research on flammability limits of fuel
71
mixtures is no less important. From the third and fourth category, many available flammability limits of
72
combustible gases and vapors are derived from ambient temperature and pressure conditions. However,
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the hazardous materials are formed usually under high temperature (>200oC) and pressure (>10bar) in
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the chemical processing industry. Hence, it is more reasonable to predict the flammability limits at
75
elevated temperature and pressure 9, 10, 22-24.
17-20
. The existence
76
Generally, the methods for flammability limits estimation can grossly divide into five groups including
77
empirical correlation, Le Chatelier’s rule, adiabatic flame temperature method, burning velocity method
78
and numerical method as shown in Table 1.
79
From the first category, the empirical correlation consists of empirical formula and group contribution
80
model. The empirical formula is under long-term research, Shimy 25 suggested the functional relationship
81
between flammability limit and the number of specific atoms in combustible. Ma summarized the
82
flammability correlations in reference
26
from the perspectives of oxygen-based and fuel-based. The 8
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former established on the stoichiometric oxygen number while the latter established on the heat of
84
combustion of fuel. The former established his method on the stoichiometric oxygen number while the
85
latter established it on the heat of combustion of fuel. Recently, the group contribution model has been
86
the subject of extensive studies which provides a new approach to deal with the flammability limits 6, 27.
87
It aims at developing a quantitative structure property relationship to predict the flammability limits of
88
combustibles
89
fuel-air-diluent mixture because the method itself does not take the dilution effect of inert gases into
90
consideration.
7, 28, 29
. However, so far none of them is capable of estimating the flammability limits of
91
From the second category, the extended Le Chatelier’s formula is proposed by Kondo et al. 20, 30, 31. It
92
expands the scope to fuel-air-diluent mixture while the original one is only applicable to fuel-air mixture.
93
According to the assumption and principle of extended Le Chatelier’s formula, it still belongs to semi-
94
empirical formula.
95
From the third category, adiabatic flame temperature method is derived from the thermal equilibrium
96
theory. That means the enthalpy of reactants is equal to that of products without energy dissipation.The
97
critical reaction temperature at the minimum concentration of a combustible that is capable of
98
propagating a flame is known as adiabatic flame temperature at lower flammability limits Tad , LFL
99
If the adiabatic flame temperature at lower flammability limits Tad , LFL is known through experimental
100
measurement, the lower flammability limits variation with diluent volume percent can be calculated.
101
Since it has difficulty to evaluate the heat capacity of unburned fuel accurately under fuel rich condition,
102
it is inappropriate to predict the upper flammability limits. Owing to adiabatic flame temperature method
103
taking all compositions into consideration, it has the potential to solve the first and second challenges
104
mentioned above. 9
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.
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From the fourth category, Liao et al.
34-37
argued that the low burning velocity is the cause of flame
106
extinction because sufficient burning velocity is necessary to overcome the thermal dissipation process.
107
This method is based on the flame propagation theory that provided a new way to deal with the
108
flammability limits of fuel-air-diluent mixture. From the fifth category, the numerical method is also a
109
promising method to predict the fire potential and much commercial software are available such as
110
CHEMKIN, CHETAH, CHEM 1D and SuperChemsTM. They all base on a specific database concerned
111
with physical-chemical properties of gases and vapors. For more information, please refer to references
112
listed in Table 1.
113
The extended adiabatic flame temperature method aims at predicting the lower flammability limits of
114
fuel-air-diluent mixtures which including fuel mixtures or diluent mixtures. The atoms equivalence and
115
nitrogen equivalent coefficients are employed to convert fuel mixtures and diluent mixtures into
116
equivalent fuel and nitrogen. The lower flammability limits can be computed by combining the non-
117
stoichiometric equation and critical adiabatic flame temperature. A cubic function is introduced to
118
describe the relation between Tad , LFL and cinert . The proposed method applies to ten compounds
119
including methane, propane, iso-octane, ethylene, acetylene, benzene, methanol, dimethyl ether, methyl
120
formate and acetone for validation. Furthermore, the comparison between the calculated and measured
121
values is carried out and the source of error is analyzed in detail. The framework of this article is plotted
122
in Figure 1.
10
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Energy & Fuels
Table 1. A concise summary of the flammability limits predicted methods Methods for flammability limit prediction
Ref.
Characteristic
Principle/Fundamental
Specific approach
Empirical correlation
Empirical formula
25, 26
They both develop black box model by providing fits to experimental data. instead
Group contribution model
6, 7, 27-29
of basing on the theory of combustible ignition, flame propagation and flame extinction.
Le Chatelier’s rule
It expands the scope of original Le Chatelier’s rule from fuel-air mixture to fuel-
20, 30, 31
Extended Le Chatelier formula
air-diluent mixture. Thermal equilibrium theory
Adiabatic flame temperature method
8, 32, 38, 39
This method is inappropriate to estimate the upper flammability limits because the heat capacity of unburned fuel is difficult to evaluate accurately.
Theory of flame propagation
Burning velocity method
34-37
It bases on the hypothesis that flammable mixture fails to support self-sustained
and thermal dissipation
flame propagation if the burning velocity is too low to conquer the dissipation effect. 11
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CHETAH software
40
They are based on the database about the physical and chemical properties of
CHEM 1D software
41, 42
flammable materials. It is an effective and promising tool to estimate the
SuperChemsTM software
32
flammability limits.
Numerical method-asymptotic
One dimensional adiabatic premixed
43, 44
It proposes one dimensional, planar, premixed, non-adiabatic flames model
theory
flame model considering detailed
considering detailed chemistry and variable properties. In addition, the effect of
chemistry
heat losses is systematically considered
Numerical method
124
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Energy & Fuels
Thermal equilibrium theory
Validation
Extended adiabatic flame temperature mothod
Non-stoichiometric equation
Nitrogen equivalent coefficients
Lower flammability limits estimation of fuel-air-diluent mixtures
Experimental measurement
To examine the calculated results with experimental data from literatures and identify the sources of error
125 126
Figure 1. The framework of this article.
127 128
2. THEORY AND METHODOLOGY
129
In this section, the calculated procedures of proposed method are presented. This method is also
130
applicable to fuel mixtures and diluent mixtures. Furthermore, seven evaluation indexes are provided to
131
assess the accuracy of the proposed method.
132
2.1. The computational procedures of extended adiabatic flame temperature method.
133
The first step is to identify the composition of fuel-air-diluent mixture. The composition of a mixture
134
containing n flammable gases, p inert gases and air can be described by eq (1):
135
A1 %Fuel1
Ai %Fueli
An %Fueln B1 %Inert1
B j %Inert j
Bp %Inert p C%Air
(1)
136
The symbol of Ai , B j , C , Fueli and Inert j denote mole fraction of the i th fuel in the mixture, mole
137
fraction of the j th diluent in the mixture, mole fraction of the air in the mixture , the i th fuel in the mixture and the
138
j th diluent in the mixture respectively.
139
The second step is to convert all the inert gases fractions into their nitrogen equivalent by nitrogen 13
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equivalent coefficients K k which provided by standard ISO 10156:2010. The nitrogen equivalent
141
coefficients are summarized in Table 2. Then the composition of the mixture can be represented as eq
142
(2):
143
A1 % Fuel1
144
If D% K1 B1 %
145
Ai % Fueli
An % Fueln K1 B1 %
K j Bj %
K p B p % N 2 C % Air
K jBj %
K p Bp % , then the composition of the mixture can be presented by
eq (3):
146
A1 % Fuel1
147
Table 2. Nitrogen equivalent coefficients K k α for inert gases relative to nitrogen 2
148 149
(2)
Ai % Fueli
An % Fueln D % N 2 C % Air
(3)
Gas
N2
CO2
He
Ar
Ne
Kr
Xe
SF6
CF4
C3F8
𝐾𝑘
1
1.5
0.9
0.55
0.7
0.5
0.5
4
2
1.5
α
The nitrogen equivalent coefficient K k =1.5 should be used when the inert gases containing three or
more atoms in their molecular formula.
150
The third step is to approximate the fuel-air-diluent mixture to fuel-oxygen-nitrogen mixture. The mole
151
fraction of oxygen and nitrogen are E% 20.95% C% and F % D% 79.05% C % respectively.
152
The composition of the mixture can be expressed by eq (4):
153
A1 % Fuel1
154
The fourth step is to calculate the nitrogen/oxygen molar ratio λ
155
The fifth step is to convert various types of fuels (Fuel1
Ai % Fueli
An % Fueln E %O2 F % N 2
(4) F . E
Fueli
Fueln ) into the equivalent
156
fuel ( C a H b Oc N d ) by their respective mole fractions as described in eq (5) ~ (8). xC ,equiv , xH , equiv ,
157
xO ,equiv and xN ,equiv represent the number of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen atoms in the
158
equivalent fuel respectively. xC ,i , xH ,i , xO ,i and xN ,i denote the number of carbon, hydrogen,
14
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oxygen and nitrogen atoms in the i th fuel respectively. The symbol yi describes the mole fraction of
160
the i th fuel in the fuel mixture as expressed in eq (9). n
161
a xC , equiv yi xc ,i
(5)
1 n
162
b xH ,equiv yi xH ,i
(6)
1 n
163
c xO , equiv yi xO ,i
(7)
1 n
164
d xN , equav yi xN ,i
(8)
1
Ai
165
yi
166
The sixth step is to establish the non-stoichiometric equation (fuel lean mixture, equivalence ratio
167
A1
Ai
(9)
An
1 ) as shown in eq (10).
168
Ca H b OC N d air O2 N 2 CO2 CO2 H 2O H 2O N 2 N 2 O2 O2
169
In the fuel lean mixture ( 1 ), the quantity of heat release depends on the amount of consumed fuel.
170
Therefore, the residual oxygen in products is a function of initial fuel concentration, as shown in eq (11)
171
~ (16). b c 4 2 1 xf v air 4.773 x f
(10)
172
vair a
(11)
173
air
(12)
174
CO a
(13)
175
H O
b 2
(14)
176
N air
177
O air CO
178
where x f is the combustible mole fraction in the mixture. From the perspective of energy balance,
179
the energy released by reactants heats the reaction products to adiabatic flame temperature in the absence
180
of heat losses which can be expressed by eq (17) 24, 32, 33.
2
2
2
2
d 2 2
(15) H O 2
2
c 2
(16)
15
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H
182
H i , reactants Ti , P and H j , products Tad , P are the enthalpy of the i th reactant at the initial temperature
183
and the enthalpy of the j th product at the adiabatic flame temperature respectively. The oxidation reaction
184
is regarded as constant pressure process. If the adiabatic flame temperature Tad
185
combustible concentration x f can be calculated by eq (18) because the coefficient of products 𝜇𝑙 is a
186
function of combustible mole fraction x f .
187
i , reactants
Tad Ti
Ti , P H j , products Tad , P
y H c i
l
(17)
is known, the
c ,i
(18)
p ,l
188
Tad , Ti , yi , H c ,i , l and c p,l are adiabatic flame temperature, initial temperature, mole fraction
189
of the i th fuel in the fuel mixtures, heat of combustion of the i th fuel in the fuel mixtures, the coefficient
190
of products and heat capacity at constant pressure of products respectively. The heat of combustion
191
depicts the total energy difference between reactants and products as expressed in eq (19) 11. In other
192
words, the heat of combustion is the total energy released in the reaction when the substances undergo
193
complete oxidation at standard conditions.
194
H c vi , reactants H 0f ,i , reactants v j , products H 0f , j , products
195
0 0 vi , reactants , H f ,i , reactants , v j , products and H f , j , products represent mole fraction of the i th reactant, heat
196
of formation of the i th reactant at standard condition, mole fraction of the j th product and heat of
197
formation of the j th product at standard condition. The heat capacity at constant pressure of products
198
c p,l is expressed as a function of temperature which is shown in eq (20) 13, 21. The empirical coefficients
199
and heat of formation are listed in Table 3 that can be retrieved from the relevant literatures 5, 11, 13 .
200 201
cp R
a0 a1T a2T 2 a3T 3 a4T 4
(19)
(20)
where c p and R denote heat capacity and conventional gas constant respectively. The conventional 16
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Energy & Fuels
gas constant equals to 8.31441 J/(mol∙K).
203
Generally, the eq (10) ~ (18) establishes the functional relation between the combustible mole fraction
204
in mixture x f and the adiabatic flame temperature Tad . Therefore, if the adiabatic flame temperature
205
at lower flammability limit Tad ,?LFL is known, its lower flammability limits xL can be calculated by the
206
adiabatic flame temperature expression (18) and non-stoichiometric equation (10) mentioned above.
207 208
In order to make the principle of extended flame temperature method more distinct, the general idea of the proposed method is shown in Figure 2. Fuel1
Fueli
Atoms equivalence
Fueln
Inert1
Inertj
Inertp
Air
Nitrogen equivalent coefficients
CaHbOcNd
Air
N2 equivalent
N2 equivalent
+ 20.95%Air
79.05%Air
CaHbOcNd
N2
Non-stoichiometric equation
Adiabatic flame temperature method
209 210
Lower flammability limits XL
Figure 2. The general idea of extended adiabatic flame temperature method.
17
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Page 18 of 49
Table 3. The standard heat of formation and empirical coefficients of heat capacity of the studied substances Name
Formula
H 0f ,i ,298 (kJ/mol)
c p / R a0 a1T a2T 2 a3T 3 a4T 4
CAS # a0
a1 103
a2 105
a3 108
a4 1011
Methane
CH4
74-82-8
4.568
-8.975
3.631
-3.407
1.091
-74.87
Ethane
C2H6
74-84-0
4.178
-4.427
5.660
-6.651
2.487
-84.55
Propane
C3H8
74-98-6
3.847
5.131
6.011
-7.893
3.079
-120.92
Octane
C8H18
111-65-9
10.824
4.983
17.751
-23.137
8.980
-250.10
Ethylene
C2H4
74-85-1
4.221
-8.782
5.795
-6.729
2.511
52.40
Acetylene
C2H2
74-86-2
2.410
10.926
-0.255
-0.790
0.524
227.06
Benzene
C6H6(g)
71-43-2
3.551
-6.184
14.365
-19.807
8.234
82.96
Methanol
CH4O
67-56-1
4.714
-6.986
4.211
-4.443
1.535
-239.20
Dimethyl ether
C2H6O
115-10-6
4.361
6.070
2.899
-3.581
1.282
-277.60
Methyl formate
C2H4O2
107-31-3
2.277
18.013
1.160
-2.921
1.342
-349.94
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Energy & Fuels
Acetone
C3H6O
67-64-1
5.126
1.511
5.731
-7.177
2.728
-248.40
Argon
Ar
7440-37-1
2.500
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.00
Carbon monoxide
CO
630-08-0
3.912
-3.913
1.182
-1.302
0.515
-110.53
Carbon dioxide
CO2
124-38-9
3.259
1.356
1.502
-2.374
1.056
-393.52
Hydrogen
H2
1333-74-0
2.883
3.681
-0.772
0.692
-0.213
0.00
Helium
He
9440-59-7
2.500
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.00
Water
H2O(g)
7732-18-5
4.395
-4.186
1.405
-1.564
0.632
-241.83
Oxygen
O2
7782-44-7
3.630
-1.794
0.658
-0.601
0.179
0.00
Nitrogen
N2
7727-37-9
3.539
-0.261
0.007
0.157
-0.099
0.00
212 213
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2.2. Evaluation indexes of computational accuracy.
215
In order to determine the accuracy of the extended adiabatic flame temperature method, seven
216
evaluation indexes including absolute difference ( AD ), average absolute difference ( AAD ), maximum
217
absolute difference ( MAD ), relative deviation ( RD ), average relative deviation ( ARD ), maximum
218
relative deviation ( MRD ) and correlation coefficient ( R 2 ) are offered in eq (21) ~ (27). The correlation
219
coefficient is computed by the sum of squares of residuals SS E and the total sum of squares SS T as
220
shown in eq (28) ~ (29) 45 :
221
AD xL , exp xL , calc 100%
222
AAD
223
MAD max xL , exp xL ,calc 100%
224
RD
225
ARD
226
xL , exp xL , calc MRD max 100% xL , exp
227
R2 1
228
SS E xL , exp xL ,calc
(21)
1 n xL,exp xL,calc 100% n i 1
(22)
xL , exp xL ,calc xL , exp
(23)
100%
(24)
1 n xL , exp xL , calc 100% x n i 1 L , exp
(25)
(26)
SS E
(27)
SST
n
2
(28)
i 1
n
229
SST xL , exp i 1
2
n xL , exp i 1 n
2
(29)
230 231
3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
232
In order to evaluate the feasibility and accuracy of this extended adiabatic flame temperature method,
233
ten compounds including methane, propane, iso-octane, ethylene, acetylene, benzene, methanol, 20
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234
dimethyl ether, methyl formate and acetone are under investigation. The lower flammability limits of
235
these ten compounds are computed by the extended adiabatic flame temperature method, then compared
236
with the observed values. Even though some latest literatures have reported the flammability limit of
237
methane, propane, propylene, methyl formate, dimethyl ether, their test method (ISO 10156, ASTM E681,
238
EN1839 etc.), apparatus (vessel size and shape) and determination criterion (visual criterion or pressure
239
criterion) are diverse 20, 30, 31, 33, 46, 47. Thence, the experimental data adopted in this article all derive from
240
bulletins of Bureau of Mines 3-5. The properties of the selected fuels are listed in Table 4.
241
The critical adiabatic flame temperature is the principle contributor of the estimated error. Many
242
literatures 8, 16, 21, 29, 32, 38-40, 48-50 have reported the adiabatic flame temperature at lower flammability limit
243
Tad ,?LFL of different kind of fuels. Vidal et al. 32 suggested specific threshold temperature to predict the
244
lower flammability limit for each combustible. However, the adiabatic flame temperature at lower
245
flammability limits hardly keep constant with increasing inert volume percent. For example, the lower
246
flammability limit of propane in air and at inertion point diluted with nitrogen are 2.2 vol% and 3 vol%
247
respectively. Quintiere
248
1380oC and the later one is 1200oC. Shebeko et al. 38 revealed that most of the flammable mixtures at the
249
inertion point are fuel-rich mixture besides methane, hydrogen and few other material. He found that the
250
intersection point of the upper and lower flammability limit curves usually meets the line of
251
stoichiometric combustion to CO and H2O as described in Figure 3. The adiabatic flame temperature
252
along the lower flammability limit curve varied with diluent volume percent. Thus, an empirical eq (30)
253
describing the relation between Tad , LFL and cinert is established by fitting calculation to the published
254
data 8, 16, 21, 29, 32, 38-40, 48-50. A cubic function is introduced to correlate the Tad , LFL and cinert which give
255
an alternative to linear function and has a potential to reduce the predicted error. The empirical
51
confirmed that the adiabatic flame temperature at the former condition is
21
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256
coefficients p , q , r and s are listed in Table 5. The procedures of determining the constants p, q,
257
r and s are summarized as below:
258
1.
259 260
To identify several mixture compositions located at the lower flammability limits from the relevant literatures.
2.
To compute the adiabatic flame temperature by Chemkin Pro software using equilibrium model
261
which takes into account the flame temperature change causing by the reaction products
262
dissociation.
263
3.
To preliminarily determine p, q, r and s by correlating the Tad , LFL and cinert .
264
4.
To further reduce the predicted error by adjusting the empirical coefficients of p, q, r and s
265
especially for the region near inertion point. Because it is difficult to evaluate the heat capacity of
266
unburned fuel under fuel-rich condition.
267
3 2 Tad , LFL pcinert qcinert rcinert s
268
Since investigated additives have similar effects on explosion limits, so only methane, acetylene and
269
methanol are presented as examples. The measured and calculated lower flammability limits of methane,
270
acetylene and methanol are plotted in Figure 4~Figure 6. The results indicate that the predicted lower
271
flammability limits have an acceptable agreement with the observed values. The lower flammability
272
limits rise slightly with increasing inert volume percent. In addition, the relative deviation of the mixture
273
composition near the inertion point is relatively large comparing to those with lower diluent concentration.
274
Since it is difficult to accurately estimate the thermal capacity of unburned fuel under fuel-rich condition.
275
The detailed accuracy indicators are listed in Table 6. The average relative deviations and maximum
276
relative deviation all remain under 3.6 vol% and 15 vol% as shown in Figure 7. The comparison between
277
predicted and measured lower flammability limits of ethylene-air-carbon dioxide and ethylene-air-
(30)
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278
nitrogen respectively is shown in Figure 8. And the experimental results are obtained by Kondo et al. 30,
279
31
280
this work are on the conservative side in most cases because standard ISO 10156 underestimates the
281
inertion effect of diluents for safety purpose
282
components based on the “the worst case” to ensure security in industry operation. The main error sources
283
of this extended adiabatic flame temperature method summarize as below:
284
, Coward et al. 3 and Zabetakis et al. 4 respectively. It turns out that the predicted limits proposed by
1.
52, 53
. It is reasonable to design and determine the mixture
The adiabatic flame temperature method is based upon the theory of thermal equilibrium and does
285
not take heat losses into consideration. However, heat losses occurred at test vessel is unavoidable
286
in practice.
287
2.
The flammability limits derived from experiment are dependent on test method (including test
288
procedure, vessel size and shape etc.) and determined criterion (either visual criterion or pressure
289
criterion).
290
3.
The functional relationship between adiabatic flame temperature and diluent volume percent also
291
plays an important role on the predicted precision. Generally, this functional relationship is
292
established by fitting experimental data to obtain analytical expression.
293
4.
The nitrogen equivalent coefficients K k derived from standard ISO 10156:2010 is one of the
294
causes of discrepancy because the ISO standard is more conservative that underestimates the
295
dilution effect of inert gases 52, 53.
296
5.
297 298 299
Many published data have minor difference on combustion heat and formation heat which definitely affects the accuracy even though the influence is not distinct.
6.
This method does not take structure contribution into account that may produce deviation when predicting the flammability limits of isomers. 23
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300 301
7.
The temperature dependence of heat capacity also affects the predicted accuracy, even though the effect is not remarkable.
302
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Page 25 of 49
Adiabatic flame temperature=C
Fuel volume concentration
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Energy & Fuels
Curve 1: Lower flammability limit Curve 2: Upper flammability limit Line 3: Stoichiometric line CO2 and H2O Line 4: Stoichiometric line CO and H2O Point 5: Intersection point between curve 1 and line 3 Point 6: Intersection point between curve 2 and line 4
2
4 Adiabatic flame temperature=C
3
6 5 1 Adiabatic flame temperature=A
Adiabatic flame temperature=B
Added inert volume percent
303 304
Figure 3. The adiabatic flame temperature at lower flammability limits varied with diluent volume
305
percent.
306 307
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Table 4. Propertiesα of selected fuels
308
Lower limit in air
M Type
Combustible
δ
Formula
x st
Δ H c /(kJ/mol) xL /(Vol%)
/(kg/kmol)
xL
Ref.
xst
Alkane
Methane
CH4
16.04
0.55
9.48
802.8
5
0.53
4, 32
Alkane
Propane
C3H8
44.09
1.52
4.02
2044.8
2.1
0.52
4, 32
Alkane
Iso-octane
C8H18
114.23
3.94
1.65
5118.5
0.95
0.58
4, 11, 26, 32
Alkene
Ethylene
C2H4
28.05
0.97
6.53
1323.6
2.7
0.41
4, 32
Alkyne
Acetylene
C2H2
26.04
0.90
8.38
1255.6
2.5
0.30
11, 26, 49, 54
Aromatic hydrocarbon
Benzene
C6H6
78.11
2.69
2.72
3170.8
1.3
0.48
4, 49
Alcohol
Methanol
CH3OH
32.04
1.11
12.25
665.6
6.7
0.55
4, 49
Ether
Dimethyl ether
CH3OCH3
46.07
1.59
6.53
1322.7
3.4
0.52
4, 49
Ester
Methyl formate
CHOOCH3
60.05
2.07
9.48
916.7
5
0.53
4
Ketone
Acetone
CH3COCH3
58.08
2.01
4.97
1686.9
2.6
0.52
4, 49
M — Molecular weight, kg/kmol; δ — Vapor specific gravity, dimensionless; x st — Stoichiometric concentration xst
309
α
310
combustion, at 25oC and constant pressure to form H2O (gas) and CO2 (gas), kJ/mol; xL —Lower flammability limit, vol%.
26
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1 100% ; Δ H c — Heat of b c 1 a 4.773 4 2
Page 27 of 49
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311
Energy & Fuels
Table 5. Temperature correction coefficients of different combinations of fuels and diluents Fuel
312
CO2
N2
p
q
r
s
p
q
r
s
Methane
0.0514
-1.5284
0.9332
1497.6
0.0026
-0.0745
-10.415
1497.6
Propane
0.0284
-0.942
8.504
1495.9
0.0077
-0.2807
-6.788
1495.9
Iso-octane
0.0362
-0.9834
-3.7779
1998.1
0.0111
-0.5232
-5.4299
1998.1
Ethylene
0.0259
-1.0672
-0.9386
1265.3
0.0037
-0.2244
-4.4299
1265.3
Acetylene
0.0048
-0.2763
-6.9797
1190.7
0.0005
-0.0637
-6.0637
1190.7
Benzene
0.0492
-0.883
-6.7057
1552.5
0.0106
-0.5543
-4.7407
1552.5
Methanol
0.0123
-0.5308
-0.1004
1497.4
0.0009
-0.0692
-7.5265
1497.4
Dimethyl ether
0.0219
-0.9293
3.5498
1512
0.0032
-0.1556
-8.528
1512
Methyl formate
0.0247
-1.0856
1.2357
1746.4
0.0063
-0.3586
-8.1647
1746.4
Acetone
0.0344
-1.4983
20.182
1444.7
0.0037
-0.2882
1.5219
1444.7
27
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313 (a) 15
Measured CH4-Air-CO2 Measured CH4-Air-H2O(v) Measured CH4-Air-N2 Predicted CH4-Air-CO2 Predicted CH4-Air-H2O(v) Predicted CH4-Air-N2 Stoichiometric line CO2 Stoichiometric line CO
14
Methane (vol%)
13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 0
5
10
314
15 20 25 Added inert (vol%)
30
35
40
315 316 (b)
15
Measured CH4-Air-He Measured CH4-Air-Ar Measured CH4-Air-20%CO2+80%N2 Predicted CH4-Air-He Predicted CH4-Air-Ar Predicted CH4-Air-20%CO2+80%N2 Stoichiometric line CO2 Stoichiometric line CO
14 13 12
Methane (vol%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 0
317 318
5
10
15
20 25 30 35 Added inert (vol%)
40
45
50
55
Figure 4. Comparison between the measured lower flammability limits of methane 3 and predicted values.
319 320
28
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321
90
Measured Acetylene-Air-CO2 Measured Acetylene-Air-N2 Predicted Acetylene-Air-CO2 Predicted Acetylene-Air-N2 Stoichiometric line CO2 Stoichiometric line CO
80
Acetylene (vol%)
70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0
5
10
15
20
322
25 30 35 40 45 Added inert (vol%)
50
55
60
65
323
Figure 5. Comparison between the measured lower flammability limits of acetylene
324
values.
4
70
and predicted
325 326
40 Measured Methanol-Air-CO2 Measured Methanol-Air-N2 Predicteded Methanol-Air-CO2 Predicteded Methanol-Air-N2 Stoichiometric line CO2 Stoichiometric line CO
35
Methanol (vol%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Energy & Fuels
30 25 20 15 10 5 0
327
5
10
15
20 25 30 Added inert (vol%)
35
40
45
328
Figure 6. Comparison between the measured lower flammability limits of methanol
329
values. 29
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50 4
and predicted
Energy & Fuels
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47
330
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Table 6. The predictive precision of methane, propane, iso-octane, ethylene, acetylene, benzene, methanol, dimethyl ether, methyl formate and acetone Compounds
Number of data points
AAD (vol%)
MAD (vol%)
ARD (%)
MRD (%)
R2
Ref.
3
Fuel
Inert
Methane
CO2
8
0.0695
0.1141
1.1340
1.7672
0.9833
H2O
9
0.0265
0.0693
0.4330
1.0694
0.9962
N2
10
0.0331
0.1113
0.5832
1.8516
0.9659
He
10
0.07082
0.2260
1.2776
3.7590
0.8915
Ar
13
0.0428
0.0959
0.9155
2.1549
0.9604
20%CO2+80%N2
12
0.0645
0.1865
1.1095
2.9478
0.9471
CO2
11
0.0253
0.0919
0.7605
2.4389
0.9954
N2
14
0.0380
0.1212
1.4686
3.9902
0.9774
CO2
11
0.0330
0.1173
1.7776
5.2704
0.9720
N2
14
0.0251
0.1109
1.4938
5.6996
0.9546
15%CO2+85%N2
13
0.0452
0.1695
2.2587
6.7505
0.9742
CO2
14
0.0596
0.1352
1.9194
4.2181
0.9880
N2
15
0.1094
0.4366
3.5340
11.7500
0.7767
CO2
18
0.0767
0.2921
2.7095
8.5685
0.8224
Propane
Iso-octane
Ethylene
Acetylene
30
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3
4
4
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Energy & Fuels
Benzene
Methanol
Dimethyl ether
Methyl formate
Acetone
N2
15
0.0674
0.5135
2.3635
15.6646
0.7023
CO2
13
0.0327
0.1207
1.5978
4.3808
0.9887
N2
12
0.0263
0.0943
1.7619
5.5781
0.8491
CO2
11
0.1173
0.3786
1.2724
3.6117
0.9832
N2
12
0.0399
0.1886
0.5162
2.2833
0.9815
CO2
10
0.0930
0.2929
2.0506
5.4214
0.9584
N2
14
0.1079
0.4309
2.7966
9.6092
0.7656
CO2
14
0.1066
0.3189
1.4390
3.8454
0.9674
N2
16
130.110307558
0.36890721
1.7683
5.3240
0.8287
CO2
13
0.059619732
0.160510937
1.5141
3.5686
0.9857
N2
15
0.032302954
0.0958091
0.9760
2.6442
0.9857
331 332
31
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4
4
4
4
4
Energy & Fuels
333 (a) 9
Relative deviation (%)
8
Fuel-Air-CO2
P25 P0 P50 P100 P75
Fuel-Air-N2
P25 P0 P50 P100 P75
7
6 5 4 3 2 1 0
334 335 336 (b) 12 10
Relative deviation (%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 32 of 49
8
6 4 2 0
337 338
Figure 7. Relative deviation between experimental and predicted lower flammability limits of ten
339
compounds.
340 32
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341 (a)
4.8 Kondo, CO2 diluent Coward, CO2 diluent Zabetakis, CO2 diluent This work, CO2 diluent
Ethylene (vol%)
4.4 4.0 3.6 3.2 2.8 2.4
0
5
10
15
342
20 25 30 Added inert (vol%)
35
40
45
343 344 (b) 3.4 Kondo, N2 diluent Coward, N2 diluent Zabetakis, N2 diluent This work, N2 diluent
3.2
Ethylene (vol%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Energy & Fuels
3.0
2.8
2.6
2.4 0 345
10
20
30 40 Added inert (vol%)
50
60
346
Figure 8. Comparison between predicted and measured lower flammability limits of ethylene-air-
347
diluent.
348
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349
4. CONCLUSIONS
350
This paper proposes an extended adiabatic flame temperature method for lower flammability limits
351
prediction of fuel-air-diluent mixture by non-stoichiometric equation and nitrogen equivalent coefficients.
352
The extended adiabatic flame temperature method is applied to ten compounds for validation and the
353
sources of error are analyzed carefully. The main conclusion can summarize as follow:
354
1.
355 356
ten compounds all remain under 3.6 volume percent. 2.
357 358
The extended adiabatic flame temperature method can predict the lower flammability limits of organic substances containing C-H-O-N atoms by atoms equivalence.
3.
359 360
The predicted values agree well with the reported data that the average relative deviations of these
The extended adiabatic flame temperature method is applicable to diluent mixture by adopting nitrogen equivalent coefficients which derived from standard ISO 10156.
4.
The predictive errors mainly cause by the following reasons: First, the extended flame temperature
361
method does not regard for the heat losses from flame front area to atmosphere. Second, the test
362
method and determined criterion both have a significant influence on the measured flammability
363
limits. Third, the functional relationship between adiabatic flame temperature and inert gases
364
volume percent also plays an important role on the exactness of the proposed method.
365
The lower flammability limit is one of the important properties of combustible mixture for fire and
366
explosion prevention in industry operation. It is widely applied in the fields of fire safety, combustion
367
process optimization, chemical engineering, process industries, suppression engineering and refrigerant
368
safety.
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AUTHOR INFORMATION
372
Corresponding Author
373
*E-mail:
[email protected] 374
Notes
375
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
376 377
378
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
379
This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.51576089) and
380
Graduate Innovation Fund of Jilin University (No.2016026). Moreover, the field work is conducted in
381
State Key Laboratory of Automotive Simulation and Control, Jilin University. The authors thank the
382
laboratory managers and staff workers for their hospitability, time and opinions. The authors are indebted
383
to the reviewers of this article for their invaluable suggestions.
384
35
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Thermal equilibrium theory
Extended adiabatic flame temperature mothod
Non-stoichiometric equation
Validation
Nitrogen equivalent coefficients
Lower flammability limits estimation of fuel-air-diluent mixtures
Experimental measurement
To examine the calculated results with experimental data from literatures and identify the sources of error
Figure 1. The framework of this article.
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Energy & Fuels
Fuel1
Fueli
Atoms equivalence
CaHbOcNd
Fueln
Inert1
Inertj
Inertp
Air
Nitrogen equivalent coefficients
Air
N2 equivalent
N2 equivalent
+ 20.95%Air
79.05%Air
CaHbOcNd
N2
Non-stoichiometric equation
Adiabatic flame temperature method
Lower flammability limits XL
Figure 2. The general idea of extended adiabatic flame temperature method.
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O2
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Adiabatic flame temperature=C
Fuel volume concentration
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Curve 1: Lower flammability limit Curve 2: Upper flammability limit Line 3: Stoichiometric line CO2 and H2O Line 4: Stoichiometric line CO and H2O Point 5: Intersection point between curve 1 and line 3 Point 6: Intersection point between curve 2 and line 4
2
4 Adiabatic flame temperature=C
3
6 5 1 Adiabatic flame temperature=A
Adiabatic flame temperature=B
Added inert volume percent Figure 3. The adiabatic flame temperature at lower flammability limits varied with diluent volume percent.
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(a)
15
Measured CH4-Air-CO2 Measured CH4-Air-H2O(v) Measured CH4-Air-N2 Predicted CH4-Air-CO2 Predicted CH4-Air-H2O(v) Predicted CH4-Air-N2 Stoichiometric line CO2 Stoichiometric line CO
14
Methane (vol%)
13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5
0
(b)
5
10
15
15 20 25 Added inert (vol%)
30
35
40
Measured CH4-Air-He Measured CH4-Air-Ar Measured CH4-Air-20%CO2+80%N2 Predicted CH4-Air-He Predicted CH4-Air-Ar Predicted CH4-Air-20%CO2+80%N2 Stoichiometric line CO2 Stoichiometric line CO
14 13 12
Methane (vol%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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11 10 9 8 7
6 5 4
0
5
10
15
20 25 30 35 Added inert (vol%)
40
45
50
55
Figure 4. Comparison between the measured lower flammability limits of methane 3 and predicted values.
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Energy & Fuels
1 90
Measured Acetylene-Air-CO2 Measured Acetylene-Air-N2 Predicted Acetylene-Air-CO2 Predicted Acetylene-Air-N2 Stoichiometric line CO2 Stoichiometric line CO
80 70
Acetylene (vol%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0
2
5
10
15
20
25 30 35 40 45 Added inert (vol%)
50
55
60
65
3
Figure 5. Comparison between the measured lower flammability limits of acetylene
4
values.
5
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70
and predicted
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6 40 Measured Methanol-Air-CO2 Measured Methanol-Air-N2 Predicteded Methanol-Air-CO2 Predicteded Methanol-Air-N2 Stoichiometric line CO2 Stoichiometric line CO
35
Methanol (vol%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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30 25 20 15 10 5 0
7
5
10
15
20 25 30 Added inert (vol%)
35
40
45
8
Figure 6. Comparison between the measured lower flammability limits of methanol
9
values.
10
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50 4
and predicted
Energy & Fuels
(a) 9
Relative deviation (%)
8
Fuel-Air-CO2
P25 P0 P50 P100 P75
Fuel-Air-N2
P25 P0 P50 P100 P75
7
6 5 4 3 2 1 0
(b) 12 10
Relative deviation (%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 48 of 49
8
6 4 2 0
Figure 7. Relative deviation between experimental and predicted lower flammability limits of ten compounds.
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(a)
4.8 Kondo, CO2 diluent Coward, CO2 diluent Zabetakis, CO2 diluent This work, CO2 diluent
Ethylene (vol%)
4.4 4.0 3.6 3.2 2.8 2.4
0
5
10
15
20 25 30 Added inert (vol%)
35
40
45
(b) 3.4
Kondo, N2 diluent Coward, N2 diluent Zabetakis, N2 diluent This work, N2 diluent
3.2
Ethylene (vol%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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3.0
2.8
2.6
2.4 0
10
20
30 40 Added inert (vol%)
50
60
Figure 8. Comparison between predicted and measured lower flammability limits of ethylene-airdiluent.
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