Impact of differential diffusion and reactivity of NH3 and H2 on flame front characteristics of lean premixed turbulent NH3/H2/N2 flames
ORAL
Abstract
Partial cracking of carbon-free ammonia (NH3) into hydrogen (H2) and nitrogen (N2) or its blending with H2 present a viable solution to challenges associated with its low reactivity and flame speed. Through direct numerical simulations of statistically planar lean turbulent premixed flames for NH3/H2 fuel blends, this study analyses effects of differential diffusion and reactivity in the characteristics of the flame front. Two fuel blends, 60%NH3/25%H2/15%N2 and 40%NH3/45%H2/15%N2, with an equivalence ratio of 0.81, are considered. The analysis reveals significant variations in local equivalence ratio within the flame leading to either stoichiometric or fuel-rich pockets despite the globally lean condition. In addition, a localised diffusion mode of burning is observed, which is stronger for H2 in the 60%NH3/25%H2/15%N2 blend, whereas it is stronger for NH3 in the 40%NH3/45% H2/15%N2 blend. The transition from lean premixed to non-premixed combustion at the rear end of the flame causes the misalignment of the normal vectors of NH3, H2, and temperature isosurfaces, impacting reaction-diffusion balance. The findings suggest that the modeling of premixed combustion of NH3/H2 blends must account for variable equivalence ratio and non-premixed burning modes, even for globally lean mixtures.
*The authors are grateful for the financial support from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (Grant: EP/W026686/1, EP/X035484/1), the British Council and computational support of the ROCKET HPC facility. RK, FEHP and HGI are also grateful for the financial support from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) and computational resources provided by the KAUST Supercomputing Laboratory.
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Presenters
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Francisco E Hernandez Perez
- King Abdullah University of Science and Technology