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Premixed Carbon Monoxide-Nitrous Oxide-Hydrogen Flames: Measured and Calculated Burning Velocities With and Without Fe(CO)5

Published

Author(s)

Gregory T. Linteris, M D. Rumminger, Valeri I. Babushok

Abstract

The burning velocity of premixed carbon monoxide-nitrous oxide flames (background water levels of 5 to 15 ppm) has been determined experimentally for a range of fuel-oxidizer equivalence ratio phi from 0.6 to 3.2, with added nitrogen up to a mole fraction of XN2 = 0.25, and with hydrogen added up to XH2 = 0.005. Numerical modeling of the flames based on a recently developed kinetic mechanism predicts the burning velocity reasonably well, and indicates that the direct reaction of CO with N20 is the most important reaction for CO and N20 consumption for values of XH2
Citation
Combustion and Flame
Volume
120
Issue
No. 1/2

Keywords

carbon monoxide, chemical inhibition, flame chemistry, iron pentacarbonyl, nitrous oxides, promoters, propellants

Citation

Linteris, G. , Rumminger, M. and Babushok, V. (2000), Premixed Carbon Monoxide-Nitrous Oxide-Hydrogen Flames: Measured and Calculated Burning Velocities With and Without Fe(CO)5, Combustion and Flame, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=914395 (Accessed March 28, 2024)
Created January 1, 2000, Updated February 19, 2017