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The effects of sooting in droplet combustionThe study of the burning of a single droplet is an ideal problem from which to gain fundamental understanding of diffusion flame characteristics. Droplet combustion is a complex physico-chemical process that involves a chemically-reacting two-phase flow with phase changes and yet simple experiments and analysis can be used to attain important insights into the burning rate, flame dynamics, kinetic extinction and disruption processes. It is a subject that has been actively studied for the past 40 years with most of the fundamental experiments being performed under reduced-gravity conditions for direct comparisons with theoretical/computational analyses that invoke spherical symmetry assumptions. In the earlier studies, the effects of sooting on the overall burning characteristics were not considered. However, recent microgravity investigations performed at the NASA-LeRC droptowers (Droplet Combustion Experiment) and others indicate that effects of soot and sootcloud formation may be significant during the lifetime of the droplet and therefore must be included in the analysis.
Document ID
19960008393
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Lee, Kyeong-Ook
(Illinois Univ. Chicago, IL, United States)
Jensen, Kirk
(Illinois Univ. Chicago, IL, United States)
Choi, Mun Young
(Illinois Univ. Chicago, IL, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
August 1, 1995
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Lewis Research Center, The 3rd International Microgravity Combustion Workshop
Subject Category
Inorganic And Physical Chemistry
Accession Number
96N15559
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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