Comparative study on the onset of detonation in methane–oxygen mixtures: initiation in a smooth tube and re-initiation downstreamof a single orifice plate
X. Lv, X. Yan, X. Wang, X. Yu, Y. Hou, T. Li, Y. Wang, J. Yu
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
An experimental comparative study of the detonation re-initiation downstream of an orifice plate and the typical deflagration-to-detonation transition in a smooth tube is carried out. In this study, two tube configurations are employed to study the onset of detonation in stoichiometric methane–oxygen mixtures, i.e., a smooth tube and a tube with a single orifice plate placed in the entrance of the self-sustained detonation transmission. Combustion wave velocity measurement and soot-foil visualization are used to characterize the initiation of detonation. The dimensionless parameters correlated with cell size, tube diameter, and orifice diameter are introduced to analyze the detonation initiation process. The results indicate that the dependence of the detonation initiation distance on the initial pressure as a whole is close to inverse proportionality, and the fitting degree is higher for the detonation re-initiation downstream of the orifice plate. The effect of inherent instability of CH\(_{4}\)–2O\(_{2}\) on the onset of detonation is significantly enhanced when the cell size is smaller than the characteristic dimension of an unobstructed tube, either for deflagration-to-detonation transition in a smooth tube or for the detonation re-initiation downstream of an orifice plate.
期刊介绍:
Shock Waves provides a forum for presenting and discussing new results in all fields where shock and detonation phenomena play a role. The journal addresses physicists, engineers and applied mathematicians working on theoretical, experimental or numerical issues, including diagnostics and flow visualization.
The research fields considered include, but are not limited to, aero- and gas dynamics, acoustics, physical chemistry, condensed matter and plasmas, with applications encompassing materials sciences, space sciences, geosciences, life sciences and medicine.
Of particular interest are contributions which provide insights into fundamental aspects of the techniques that are relevant to more than one specific research community.
The journal publishes scholarly research papers, invited review articles and short notes, as well as comments on papers already published in this journal. Occasionally concise meeting reports of interest to the Shock Waves community are published.