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Experimental observations of methane–oxygen diffusion flame structure in a sub-millimetre microburner
69
Citations
24
References
2005
Year
Chemical EngineeringAlumina MicroburnerEngineeringReactor WallsCombustion ScienceSub-millimetre MicroburnerMicroburner Combustion ChannelThermodynamicsExperimental ObservationsThermal EngineeringChemical KineticsLaminar FlameHeterogeneous Combustion
We examine the structure of confined, laminar methane–oxygen diffusion flames in an alumina microburner with a sub-millimetre dimension. To minimize termination of gas-phase combustion via surface radical quenching, the reactor walls are chemically treated and annealed. We show, through chemiluminescent images, that gas-phase methane–oxygen diffusion flames exist in the microburner without the need for catalytic reaction. However, their structure differs from the continuous laminar diffusion flame profiles that we would expect in a similar burner configuration on a macroscopic scale. Instead, we observe a sequence of isolated reaction zones structures (flame cells) that form along the length of the microburner combustion channel aligned in the direction of the gas flow. This form of cellular diffusion flame instability appears to be unique to wall-confined combustion in microscale devices. The number of flame cells observed depends on the inlet gas velocities and initial mixture strengths.
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