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Experimental and Modeling Study of the Burning of an Ethanol Droplet in MicrogravityThe microgravity ethanol droplet combustion experiments were performed aboard the STS-94/MSL-1 Shuttle mission within the Fiber-Supported Droplet Combustion-2 (FSDC-2) program. The burning histories and flame standoffs for pure ethanol and ethanol/water droplets were obtained from the images recorded with two 8 mm videocameras. The obtained results show that average gasification rate is related to the initial droplet size in a manner similar to n-alkanes and methanol and consistent with the results of Hara and Kumagai and the data taken recently in the NASA-Lewis 2.2 s droptower. A transient, moving finite-element chemically reacting flow model applied previously to sphero-symmetric combustion of methanol, methanol/water, n-alkane, and n-alkane binary mixture droplets was adopted for the problem of ethanol droplet combustion. The model includes detailed description of gas-phase reaction chemistry and transport, a simplified description of liquid phase transport, and non-luminous radiative heat transfer. Gas-phase chemistry was described with the detailed reaction mechanism of Norton and Dryer, which consists of 142 reversible elementary reactions of 33 species. Another recently published reaction mechanism of high-temperature ethanol oxidation was also considered. The model predictions were found to compare favorably with the experimental data. The model analysis also indicates that water condensation in the case of ethanol has smaller effect on average droplet gasification rate as compared with previously studied methanol cases. This effect is explained by non-ideal (azeotropic) behavior of binary ethanol-water mixtures. Further analysis of computational results and ethanol droplet radiative extinction behavior will be discussed.
Document ID
20020024460
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
Authors
Kazakov, Andrei
(Princeton Univ. NJ United States)
Conley, Jordan
(Princeton Univ. NJ United States)
Dryer, Frederick L.
(Princeton Univ. NJ United States)
Ferkul, Paul
Date Acquired
September 7, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 2000
Subject Category
Inorganic, Organic And Physical Chemistry
Meeting Information
Meeting: Twenty-Eighth International Symposium on Combustion
Location: Edinburgh
Country: United Kingdom
Start Date: August 2, 2000
Sponsors: Princeton Univ., NASA Glenn Research Center
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 101-32-0D
CONTRACT_GRANT: NCC3-655
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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