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Journal ArticleDOI

A 5-step reduced mechanism for combustion of CO/H2/H2O/CH4/CO2 mixtures with low hydrogen/methane and high H2O content

TL;DR: ZMN and NS acknowledge the funding through the Low Carbon Energy University Alliance Programme supported by Tsinghua University, China as mentioned in this paper, and also like to acknowledge the educational grant through the A.G. LeventisFoundation.
About: This article is published in Combustion and Flame.The article was published on 2013-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 63 citations till now.

Summary (3 min read)

1. Introduction

  • Recent developments in gas-turbine power generation include the use of low calorific value fuels.
  • Generally, these mechanisms were developed systematically by introducing steady-state and/or partial equilibrium assumptions respectively for some species and reactions involved in a skeletal mechanism.
  • The hydrogen content is low in the BFG as noted earlier and one may like to mix it with small amounts of H2, CH4 and H2O or other gases containing high fractions of these species in order to enhance the BFG combustion characteristics.
  • To the best of their knowledge this is the first attempt to obtain a reduced mechanism for a multi-component fuel mixture with a good accuracy over a wide range of thermodynamic and thermo-chemical conditions.

2. Development of skeletal mechanism: Sensitivity analysis

  • The chemical kinetics of CO/H2 mixture oxidation has been investigated by numerous studies in the past and a sustained interest on the combustion of Syngas in gas turbines for power generation has led to publication of a dedicated volume on this topic in the Combustion Science and Technology journal in 2008.
  • Flame speed sensitivity analyses are conducted using the GRI [19], at high (20%) and zero water vapour content in the fuel mixture in order to (1) identify the most important reactions in each case and (2) to obtain a suitable skeletal mechanism for CO/H2/H2O mixtures.
  • CO2 has large sensitivities for both dry 9 and wet mixtures and OH + CO = H+ CO2 remains as the most important reaction with sensitivity nearly five times larger than for the HO2 reaction for CO consumption.
  • Thus, the effect of small CH4 amounts in the fuel mixture is adequately captured by the extra 9 reactions noted above, something which was neglected while developing reduced mechanism in a previous study [14].

3. Development of reduced chemistry

  • By removing certain intermediate species from the detailed mechanism, the computational effort is reduced as the number of ODEs that must be solved is decreased.
  • Intermediate species can be systematically identified and removed from the ODE system via two major sequential steps.
  • Second, further reduction of the skeletal mechanism results in a reduced mechanism.
  • For fast development of reduced chemistry, the interactive Computer Assisted Reduction Mechanism (CARM) algorithm [40, 43] was used for the automatic generation of reduced chemistry with the ability to produce source codes needed for computing the chemical sources.

4. Reduced mechanism

  • The same would apply in cases where Ar is the inert.
  • Also, for fine tuning of the reduced chemistry, the activation energy of reaction 2 in Table 3 was increased by 27.5%, a procedure similar to the correction factor employed by Boivin et al. [14] to correctly predict the ignition delay times.
  • The steady-state relationships can be written as dCA dt = ψA(ss, ss )− gA(ss, ss)CA = 0, where ψA(ss, ss) and gA(ss, ss) are functions of species both in steady-state, denoted by ss, and non steady-state, denoted by ss.
  • Since the current QSS species are not strongly coupled, the point iteration scheme is found to be sufficient for the present case.

5. Validation

  • Both the skeletal and reduced mechanisms are validated over wide range of conditions shown in Table 4, by comparing laminar flame speeds, ignition delay times and the flame structure with experimental results and/or the computational results obtained using the GRI Mech 3.0 [19].
  • The flame speeds are calculated using the PREMIX [45] code of the CHEMKIN package [46] including the thermal diffusion and multi-component formulation for the species’ diffusivities.
  • In the cases where no experimental data are available, the skeletal and the reduced mechanisms are validated against the predictions of the GRI Mech 3.0 [19] and so readers are cautioned while interpreting this particular comparison.
  • In calculating the ignition delay times with the reduced mechanism, the correction factor used in the study of Boivin et 18 al. [14] is employed.
  • This correction factor was originally developed in [47] from an analysis of the autoignition eigenvalue under lean conditions.

5.1. Premixed flames

  • Comparisons of computed flame speeds, sL, against available experimental data for the mixtures listed in Table 4 are presented in Figs. 1-10.
  • The above comparisons show that overall both the skeletal and the reduced mechanism give good agreement with the experimental data and the computations with the GRI Mech 3.0 [19].
  • The skeletal mechanism of [14] as implemented in this study, under-predicts the flame speeds for all equivalence ratios and the level of under-prediction increases with the H2O content in the fuel mixture.
  • Again there is a good agreement with the full GRI Mech 3.0 [19] and it is somewhat improved in the high pressure case, compared to the predictions of the methane-containing fuel mixture in Fig. 11.

5.2. Autoignition

  • Figure 21 compares the computed ignition delay times (with the correction factor in Eq. 3 applied) with the experimental results of Kalitan et al. [55] for CO/H2 mixtures over a range of conditions listed in Table 4.
  • Overall, the agreement is very good for both low and high pressures and for the entire range of temperatures considered.
  • Figure 22 compares ignition delay times computed for a CO2-diluted mixture to the measured values in [28] at different pressures.
  • The reduced mechanism shows good agreement with the experimental data for the entire temperature range.
  • As noted in [28] using sensitivity analysis, the most important reactions at the conditions tested were the chain-branching reactions and the three body recombination reaction H + O2 + CO2 = HO2 + CO2.

6. Speed up times

  • Table 5 shows the time in seconds taken for each run for each of the conditions shown in Table 4.
  • The flame speeds were calculated using the PREMIX code [45] with thermal diffusion and a multi-component formulation for the species’ diffusivities, in a 2.5 cm domain with adaptive grid.
  • It is clear that both the skeletal and reduced mechanisms reduced the computational time significantly compared to the GRI Mech 3.0 [19], while maintaining the same level of accuracy.
  • In particular for case 3 the skeletal mechanism is about 50 times faster and the reduced mechanism about 300 times faster.

7. Conclusions

  • A 5-step reduced chemical kinetic mechanism involving 9 species for accurate prediction of the combustion characteristics of multi-species fuel mixtures of CO/H2/H2O/CH4/CO2, having low hydrogen/methane and high water vapour content is derived.
  • These two mechanisms are tested for their ability to predict laminar flame speeds, flame structure and ignition delay times over a wide range of pressure, temperature and fuel mixture composition.
  • It is also worth to note that these conditions are relevant for stationary gas-turbines for power generation.
  • Furthermore, it is found that use of the reduced mechanism decreases the computational time significantly compared to the GRI Mech 3.0, while maintaining a a very good degree of accuracy.
  • ZMN also likes to acknowledge the educational grant through the A.G. Leventis Foundation.

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Abstract: An experimental and numerical study on thermal and chemical effects of water vapor addition on the laminar burning velocities of syngas was conducted using a constant-volume chamber and CHEMKIN package. The experimental conditions in the present study for CO/H2/air/H2O mixtures with hydrogen fraction in syngas were from 5% to 50%, initial temperature of 373 K, pressures of 0.1 and 0.5 MPa and water dilution ratios from 0% to 30%. The measured laminar burning velocity data were compared with simulations with three mechanisms, the San Diego mechanism and those of Davis et al. and Li et al. The experimental data showed a reasonable agreement with the calculated values at low and high pressures when the content of H2 in the fuel was low. However, when H2/CO ratio in the fuel was higher (75/25 and 95/05), all three mechanisms overpredicated the laminar burning velocity for fuel-rich mixtures. Sensitivity analysis was performed to identify the possible sources of discrepancy between the experimental data and ca...

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References
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TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive reaction mechanism for the oxidation of carbon monoxide in the presence of hydrogen is described, and model predictions are compared with experimental data over wide ranges of physical conditions.
Abstract: A comprehensive reaction mechanism for the oxidation of carbon monoxide in the presence of hydrogen is described. Model predictions are compared with experimental data over wide ranges of physical conditions. The data, obtained from shock tube experiments and various types of reactor experiments, encompassed a combined temperature range of 823-2870 K, fuel-oxidizer equivalence ratios between 0.0005 and 6.0, C/H ratios between 0005 and 128, and pressures between 0.3 and 2.2 atmospheres, Validation of the reaction mechanism is obtained with reproduction of the experimental results by the model predictions and from sensitivity analysis calculations Results from the latter calculations provided a quantitative measure of the sensitivity of the model predictions to the imposed input parameters over the complete range of experimental parameters noted above.

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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.

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Frequently Asked Questions (2)
Q1. What are the contributions in "A 5-step reduced mechanism for combustion of co/h2/h2o/ch4/co2 mixtures with low hydrogen/methane and high h2o content" ?

In this study a 5-step reduced chemical kinetic mechanism involving 9 species is developed for combustion of Blast Furnace Gas ( BFG ), a multi-component fuel containing CO/H2/CH4/CO2, typically with low hydrogen, methane and high water fractions, for conditions relevant for stationary gas-turbine combustion. 

The computational results are compared to experimental measurements of the flame speeds available in the literature for a wide range of pressure, 1-20 atm., temperature, 298- 700 K and thermo-chemical conditions. The authors thank the reviewers for suggesting many validation data which helped to show the robustness of the mechanisms over wide range of conditions for flame speeds and autoignition delay times.