The recombination region in lean steady premixed H$_2$ flames
H$_2$ premixed flames are well known for a long, trailing region where the unburnt H$_2$ and the super-equilibrium concentrations of radicals left past the fuel consumption layer gradually decay to thermodynamic equilibrium. This recombination region, it's argued here, is a second order effect...
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Zusammenfassung: | H$_2$ premixed flames are well known for a long, trailing region where the
unburnt H$_2$ and the super-equilibrium concentrations of radicals left past
the fuel consumption layer gradually decay to thermodynamic equilibrium. This
recombination region, it's argued here, is a second order effect induced by the
premature quenching of the shuffle reactions, which inhibits the decay to
equilibrium in the first approximation.
Its structure and kinetics are studied in detail to capture the small but
finite reaction rates accounting for its characteristic length scale, which is
large enough to render the diffusive transport negligible, hence deactivating
the upstream feedback link with the main flame structure. It is isothermal and
can be described, in moderately lean flames, by just the distribution of H$_2$
as the sole degree of freedom, a drastic reduction consequence of the strongly
constrained evolution imposed by the almost exactly quenched shuffle reactions.
The rate of decay to equilibrium of H$_2$ and radicals is thus dictated by
the balance between the convective transport and chemical sinks controlled by
the HO$_2$ kinetics, which becomes dominant after the shuffle reactions quench.
Essentially, it is a two-step mechanism with the first, rate-limiting step
converting O$_2$ into HO$_2$, whereas the second one, comprising multiple fast,
parallel pathways, depletes radicals as HO$_2$ is converted into O$_2$ and
H$_2$O.
Generalizations to very lean and nearly stoichiometric flames, when the one
degree of freedom model is not applicable, as well as the effect of heat losses
are also briefly discussed. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2009.12227 |