Publication | Closed Access
Plasma assisted ignition and high-speed flow control: non-thermal and thermal effects
290
Citations
41
References
2009
Year
EngineeringCombustion TheoryCombustion EngineeringPlasma PhysicsPlasma CombustionPlasma SimulationRecent ProgressPlasma ConfinementNonthermal PlasmaHydrocarbon IgnitionIgnition Delay TimeHeat TransferInertial Fusion EnergyAerospace EngineeringCombustion ScienceHigh-speed Flow ControlPlasma ApplicationChemical KineticsThermal Effects
The paper reviews recent progress in two rapidly developing engineering applications of plasmas, plasma assisted combustion and plasma assisted high-speed flow control. Experimental and kinetic modeling results demonstrate the key role of non-thermal plasma chemistry in hydrocarbon ignition by uniform, repetitively pulsed, nanosecond pulse duration, low-temperature plasmas. Ignition delay time in premixed ethylene–air flows excited by the plasma has been measured in a wide range of pulse repetition rates and equivalence ratios and compared with kinetic modeling calculations, showing good agreement. Comparing ignition delay time predicted by the model for plasma assisted ignition and for ignition by equilibrium heating demonstrated that chain reactions of radicals generated by the plasma reduce ignition time by up to two orders of magnitude and ignition temperature by up to 300 K. These results provide additional evidence of the non-thermal nature of low-temperature plasma assisted ignition.
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