Stochastic ignition of fuel droplets impacting a hot surface: comparison of alkanes, conventional, and sustainable aviation fuels

ORAL

Abstract

Flammable fluids dripping onto hot surfaces are a major source of fires in aircraft, vehicles, and heavy machinery. The present work investigates experimentally the ignitability of different liquid fuels (linear alkanes, conventional petroleum-derived aviation fuels, and sustainable aviation fuels synthetized from biomass feedstocks) in an idealized scenario in which mm-sized fuel droplets orthogonally impact a flat surface raised to temperatures well-above the Leidenfrost point, in quiescent atmospheric pressure air. These droplets, with Weber number in the order of 250, break up on impact and ignite if the surface temperature is sufficiently elevated. We performed high speed imaging of the droplet break-up and combustion process, and report ignition probabilities and time-to-ignition for the different fuels. In addition, the composition of the fuels was characterized. Evaporation and combustion properties were derived from simulations to interpret our experimental results.

*The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support by The Boeing Company under grant number SSOW-BRT-Z1121-5029 and JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number JP20KK0319.

Publication: Stochastic ignition of isolated fuel droplet impacting on a hot surface: effect of next generation sustainable aviation fuels, in preparation for "Fuel"

Presenters

  • Guillaume Vignat

    • Stanford University

Authors

  • Guillaume Vignat

    • Stanford University
  • Yichi Ma

    • Stanford University
  • Jen Zen Ho

    • Stanford University
  • Younghwa Cho

    • Hokkaido University
  • Nozomu Hashimoto

    • Hokkaido University
  • Timoteo Dinelli

    • Politecnico di Milano
  • Taekeun Yoon

    • Stanford University
  • Colette Fisher

    • Stanford University
  • Matthias Ihme

    • Stanford University