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Hongyan Sun

Bio: Hongyan Sun is an academic researcher from Princeton University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Reaction rate & Laminar flame speed. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 289 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: In this article, a kinetic mechanism based on recently published reaction rate constants is presented to model these measured laminar flame speeds as well as a limited set of other experimental data.
Abstract: Laminar flame speeds were accurately measured for CO/H 2 /air and CO/H 2 /O 2 /helium mixtures at different equivalence ratios and mixing ratios by the constant-pressure spherical flame technique for pressures up to 40 atmospheres. A kinetic mechanism based on recently published reaction rate constants is presented to model these measured laminar flame speeds as well as a limited set of other experimental data. The reaction rate constant of CO + HO 2 → CO 2 + OH was determined to be k = 1.15 × 10 5 T 2.278 exp(−17.55 kcal/ RT ) cm 3 mol −1 s −1 at 300–2500 K by ab initio calculations. The kinetic model accurately predicts our measured flame speeds and the non-premixed counterflow ignition temperatures determined in our previous study, as well as homogeneous system data from literature, such as concentration profiles from flow reactor and ignition delay time from shock tube experiments.

317 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an updated H2/O2 kinetic model based on that of Li et al. (Int J Chem Kinet 36, 2004, 566-575) is presented and tested against a wide range of combustion targets.
Abstract: An updated H2/O2 kinetic model based on that of Li et al. (Int J Chem Kinet 36, 2004, 566–575) is presented and tested against a wide range of combustion targets. The primary motivations of the model revision are to incorporate recent improvements in rate constant treatment and resolve discrepancies between experimental data and predictions using recently published kinetic models in dilute, high-pressure flames. Attempts are made to identify major remaining sources of uncertainties, in both the reaction rate parameters and the assumptions of the kinetic model, affecting predictions of relevant combustion behavior. With regard to model parameters, present uncertainties in the temperature and pressure dependence of rate constants for HO2 formation and consumption reactions are demonstrated to substantially affect predictive capabilities at high-pressure, low-temperature conditions. With regard to model assumptions, calculations are performed to investigate several reactions/processes that have not received much attention previously. Results from ab initio calculations and modeling studies imply that inclusion of H + HO2 = H2O + O in the kinetic model might be warranted, though further studies are necessary to ascertain its role in combustion modeling. In addition, it appears that characterization of nonlinear bath-gas mixture rule behavior for H + O2(+ M) = HO2(+ M) in multicomponent bath gases might be necessary to predict high-pressure flame speeds within ∼15%. The updated model is tested against all of the previous validation targets considered by Li et al. as well as new targets from a number of recent studies. Special attention is devoted to establishing a context for evaluating model performance against experimental data by careful consideration of uncertainties in measurements, initial conditions, and physical model assumptions. For example, ignition delay times in shock tubes are shown to be sensitive to potential impurity effects, which have been suggested to accelerate early radical pool growth in shock tube speciation studies. In addition, speciation predictions in burner-stabilized flames are found to be more sensitive to uncertainties in experimental boundary conditions than to uncertainties in kinetics and transport. Predictions using the present model adequately reproduce previous validation targets and show substantially improved agreement against recent high-pressure flame speed and shock tube speciation measurements. Comparisons of predictions of several other kinetic models with the experimental data for nearly the entire validation set used here are also provided in the Supporting Information. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 44: 444–474, 2012

708 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed chemical kinetic mechanism for hydrogen and H2/CO (syngas) mixtures has been updated, rate constants have been adjusted to reflect new experimental information obtained at high pressures and new rate constant values recently published in the literature, and good agreement was observed.

576 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, two measurement approaches were employed: one using flame area images of a conical Bunsen flame and the other based on velocity profile measurements in a one-dimensional stagnation flame.

406 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of flammability characteristics of hydrogen can be found in this paper, where the authors present a thorough and self-contained tutorial that covers the existing fundamental knowledge in a uniform and concise manner.

297 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an updated H2/O2 reaction mechanism is presented that incorporates recent reaction rate determinations in shock tubes from our laboratory, which used UV and IR laser absorption to monitor species time-histories.

282 citations