1 / 5

MAE 5310: COMBUSTION FUNDAMENTALS

MAE 5310: COMBUSTION FUNDAMENTALS. Lecture 4: Introduction to Chemical Equilibrium August 29, 2012 Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department Florida Institute of Technology D. R. Kirk. CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM.

blodwyn
Télécharger la présentation

MAE 5310: COMBUSTION FUNDAMENTALS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MAE 5310: COMBUSTION FUNDAMENTALS Lecture 4: Introduction to Chemical Equilibrium August 29, 2012 Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department Florida Institute of Technology D. R. Kirk

  2. CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM • So far we have calculated adiabatic flame temperature assuming complete combustion • All fuel is completely oxidized to form CO2, H2O and excess O2 and N2 are carried through unaffected • Assumption reasonable for T < 1250 K, but most combustion systems operate at higher T • Species that are normally stable at ambient conditions dissociate • Concentration is determined by a balance between oxidation and formation • Balance is a function of T, P and concentration • Note: The chemical equilibrium relations we will use still only approximate the species concentrations in a combustion process. That is, they rest on the assumption that the conditions are constant for a sufficiently long time for all the reactions to reach equilibrium

  3. ADDITIONAL PRODUCT FORMATION • NO Dissociation: Complete Combustion • Equivalence ratio less than or equal unity, f≤ 1 • The products formed are: CO2, H2O, O2, and N2 • Equivalence ratio greater than unity, f > 1 • The products formed are: CO2, CO, H2O, H2, and N2 • WITH Dissociation • Products formed include: CO2, CO H2O, H2, H, OH, O2, O, NO, N2, and N • Concentration is dependent on T, P and f

  4. CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM FOR A FIXED-MASS SYSTEM • If final temperature of combustion reaction is high enough, CO2 will dissociate • Can calculate adiabatic flame temperature as function of a (a = fraction of CO2 dissociated) • Must consider second law: dS ≥ 0 • Composition of system will shift toward point of maximum entropy when approaching from either side, since dS is positive • Once maximum entropy is reached no further changes since would violate second law • (dS)U,V,m = 0

  5. PROPANE-AIR COMBUSTION AT 1 ATMAdopted From: Turns, S.R., Introduction to Combustion

More Related