Nanosecond Pulsed Plasmas in Dynamic Combustion Environments

Nanosecond Pulsed Plasmas in Dynamic Combustion Environments

Author: Colin A. Pavan

Publisher:

Published: 2023

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Plasma assisted combustion (PAC) is a promising technology for extending combustion operating envelopes with a low energy cost relative to flame power. It has been investigated for use in various situations, particularly those where combustion is being performed near flammability limits imposed by equivalence ratio, residence time, etc. While the fundamental processes allowing plasma to modify combustion dynamics have been well studied, there are still many unresolved questions in determining the relative contribution of different actuation pathways in different situations (thermal enhancement, kinetic enhancement or transport-induced effects) and how the plasma will evolve and interact with the flame in a dynamic combustion environment. The plasmas being used for PAC are typically non-equilibrium and are often produced by the nanosecond repetitively pulsed discharge (NRPD) strategy. The development of these discharges is highly dependent both on applied voltage and also on the gas environment (composition, temperature, flow field, etc.). As the plasma affects the combustion, so too does the combustion affect the plasma structure and energy deposition pathways. This two-way coupling means that the plasma's ability to modify the combustion, and the mechanisms by which it achieves these effects, will vary as the environment changes due to combustion dynamics. This impact of the combustion on the plasma has received considerably less attention than the other direction of interaction, especially in environments with transient or propagating flames. The first main objective of this thesis is to explore the development of NRPDs in dynamic combustion environments and in particular how the plasma develops on the timescales of transient combustion (many accumulated pulses). This is performed first in a laminar, mesoscale platform to probe the interaction in detail, and the important insights are later shown to be relevant to high power systems of practical interest. While the impact of the plasma on the flame has been considerably better studied and the fundamental processes are well understood, there are still hurdles that must be overcome before PAC systems can begin to be designed and implemented for use outside of the laboratory. The development of versatile and flexible engineering models of the impact of the plasma will be necessary to allow system designers to make predictions about combustor operation when plasma is applied. The second main objective of this thesis is to develop such an engineering model and demonstrate its predictive capabilities across a variety of configurations. The model is developed for a laminar mesoscale platform and is shown to correctly predict the impact of the plasma in several different configurations, indicating a path forward towards physics[1]informed design of PAC systems. The model also provides important physical insight of the impact of plasma on flame, such as the role of pressure waves in disturbing the flame dynamics, even when considering uniform DBD discharges.


Nanosecond Pulsed Plasma-assisted Combustion

Nanosecond Pulsed Plasma-assisted Combustion

Author: Moon Soo Bak

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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In this study, the use of non-equilibrium plasmas is examined as possible methods of active control of combustion. The plasmas investigated here include nanosecond-pulsed repetitive discharges as well as nanosecond-pulsed laser-produced breakdowns. These sources are used to stabilize both premixed and jet-diffusion flames of various fuel types. The use of nanosecond-pulsed repetitive discharges to stabilize lean premixed fuel-air mixtures is found to extend the equivalence ratio for complete combustion to lower values, in some cases, below the so-called lean flammability limits. This extension depends strongly on the pulse repetition frequency or average discharge power. Simulations reveal that a significant production of radicals associated with gas heating is responsible for flame stabilization and this is attributed mainly to a dissociative quenching of electronically excited species by molecular oxygen. In jet diffusion flames, anchoring of the flame-base is best when the discharge plasma is positioned where the local equivalence ratio is between 0.8 and 1.9. Lastly, the discharge plasma source is replaced by laser-induced breakdowns. Two successive laser pulses with a variable time delay are employed to mimic repetitive breakdowns expected from a future high frequency laser source of sufficient power. From studies first carried out in pure air, it is found that the first laser breakdown causes a temporal region virtually transparent to the subsequent laser pulse during the interval from 100 ns to 60 μs. This is attributed to heating by the plasma, reducing the density below threshold levels needed for absorption of a laser pulse. In premixed fuel-air mixtures, the first breakdown induces a second region of transparency during the interval from 100 μs to 2 ms after the pulse due to the heat released by combustion. These findings limit the laser repetition rate to a maximum of 500 Hz when the equivalence ratio is 1. Time-resolved imaging of CH* chemiluminescence reveals flame front merging confirming that flame stabilization can be achieved at these moderate laser repetition rates.


Shock Wave-Boundary-Layer Interactions

Shock Wave-Boundary-Layer Interactions

Author: Holger Babinsky

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2011-09-12

Total Pages: 481

ISBN-13: 1139498649

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Shock wave-boundary-layer interaction (SBLI) is a fundamental phenomenon in gas dynamics that is observed in many practical situations, ranging from transonic aircraft wings to hypersonic vehicles and engines. SBLIs have the potential to pose serious problems in a flowfield; hence they often prove to be a critical - or even design limiting - issue for many aerospace applications. This is the first book devoted solely to a comprehensive, state-of-the-art explanation of this phenomenon. It includes a description of the basic fluid mechanics of SBLIs plus contributions from leading international experts who share their insight into their physics and the impact they have in practical flow situations. This book is for practitioners and graduate students in aerodynamics who wish to familiarize themselves with all aspects of SBLI flows. It is a valuable resource for specialists because it compiles experimental, computational and theoretical knowledge in one place.


Non-equilibrium Kinetic Studies of Repetitively Pulsed Nanosecond Discharge Plasma Assisted Combustion

Non-equilibrium Kinetic Studies of Repetitively Pulsed Nanosecond Discharge Plasma Assisted Combustion

Author: Mruthunjaya Uddi

Publisher:

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 177

ISBN-13:

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Abstract: The dissertation presents non-equilibrium chemical kinetic studies of large volume lean gaseous hydrocarbon/ air mixture combustion at temperatures (~300K) much below self ignition temperatures and low pressures (40-80torr), in ~25 nanosecond duration repetitive high voltage (~18kV) electric discharges running at 10 Hz. Xenon calibrated Two Photon Absorption Laser Induced Fluorescence (TALIF) is used to measure absolute atomic oxygen concentrations in air, methane-air, and ethylene-air non-equilibrium plasmas, as a function of time after initiation of a single 25 nsec discharge pulse at 10Hz. Oxygen atom densities are also measured after a burst of nanosecond discharges at a variety of delay times, the burst being run at 10Hz. Each burst contains sequences of 2 to 100 nanosecond discharge pulses at 100 kHz. Burst mode measurements show very significant (up to ~0.2%) build-up of atomic oxygen density in air, and some build-up (by a factor of approximately three) in methane-air at [phi]=0.5. Burst measurements in ethylene-air at [phi]=0.5 show essentially no build-up, due to rapid O atom reactions with ethylene in the time interval between the pulses. Nitric oxide density is also measured using single photon Laser Induced Fluorescence (LIF), in a manner similar to oxygen atoms, and compared with kinetic modeling. Fluorescence from a NO (4.18ppm) +N2 calibration gas is used to calibrate the NO densities. Peak density in air is found to be ~ 3.5ppm at ~ 225us, increasing from almost initial levels of ~ 0 ppm directly after the pulse. Kinetic modeling using only the Zeldovich mechanism predicts a slow increase in NO formation, in ~ 2 ms, which points towards the active participation of excited N2 and O2 molecules and N atoms in forming NO molecules. Ignition delay at a variety of fuel/ air conditions is studied using OH emission measurements at ~ 308nm as ignition foot prints. The ignition delay is found to be in the range of 6-20ms for ethylene/ air mixtures. No ignition was observed in the case of methane/ air mixtures. All these measurements agree well with kinetic modeling developed involving plasma reactions and electron energy distribution function calculations.


Pulsed Plasma Generator Development and Low-temperature Plasma-assisted Combustion at Atmospheric Pressure

Pulsed Plasma Generator Development and Low-temperature Plasma-assisted Combustion at Atmospheric Pressure

Author: Mathew Evans

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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"This thesis presents an experimental study of the engineering and physics of high-voltage nanosecond-pulsed diffuse discharges, and their application to the enhancement of lean-premixed combustion at atmospheric pressure. The technology development in this work is focused on providing appropriate low-temperature radical pools, and the experiments are aimed at demonstrating the effect of these pools for combustion actuation. The experimental results are focused on the explanation of the physical processes associated with these discharges. The discharge propagation and emission spectrum were examined, the distribution functions of particles along internal energy levels were calculated, and the resulting enhancement of combustion was observed. This work shows that the plasma emission from fuel-lean mixtures is primarily composed of high vibrational populations of electronically excited nitrogen molecules, upon which a low-temperature is measured on the rotational manifold. Previous work shows that these low-temperature excited particles will collide with molecular oxygen, or fuel molecules, to produce species (atomic/molecular ground/excited oxygen, fragmented fuel molecules...) that accelerate chain-branching reactions in the combustion reaction mechanism. This work shows that the majority of the electronically excited vibrational states of nitrogen molecules, in a diffuse discharge, decay rapidly after the application of a high-voltage pulse. These findings set the framework for the implementation of diffuse plasma to laboratory-scale combustion enhancement. As an integral part of this work, the design and development of electrical generators that can produce such a reactive medium in large volume is included, and extensively detailed. An inexpensive solid-state pulse generator, based on commercially available amorphous ferromagnetic materials, is designed and developed to drive capacitive loads. The generator is used to produce large volumes of diffuse plasma and increase the blow off velocity of stagnation flames. To further investigate this enhancement, an optically accessible plasma burner is implemented and used for the detailed study of stagnation flame plasma actuation. This work shows that significant actuation can be provided to a flame, when diffuse plasma is placed upstream, and directly in contact with the combustion front. The displacement of the leading edge of a flame, into the fresh unburned mixture, is measured following a high-voltage actuating pulse. The displacement of the leading edge strongly points toward low-temperature reactivity enhancement. The optical and electrical characteristics of the diffuse plasma are reported for both the non-combusting and combusting flows. These provide a more accurate picture of the thermal characteristics and complex phenomena occurring in this transient discharge. Streamer propagation dynamics and coupled energy measurements are reported to provide further insight regarding the delicate balance that exists between plasma and flame sheet in this experimental configuration. It can be concluded that diffuse plasma is an effective low-temperature chemical actuation method for combustion enhancement at atmospheric pressure.To conclude this work, the first step toward high-pressure actuation of combustion with diffuse plasma was explored. The task of producing diffuse plasma above atmospheric pressure was undertaken. This work presents the development of a second solid-state pulse generator with increased power delivery capabilities. The generator is used to produce large volumes of diffuse plasma in a high-pressure vessel filled with air. It is found that diffuse plasma actuation could eventually be implemented in a high-pressure combustion experiment using this technology." --


Numerical Simulation of Nanosecond Repetitively Pulsed Discharges in Air at Atmospheric Pressure

Numerical Simulation of Nanosecond Repetitively Pulsed Discharges in Air at Atmospheric Pressure

Author: Fabien Tholin

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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In this Ph.D. thesis, we have carried out numerical simulations to study nanosecond repetitively pulsed discharges (NRPD) in a point-to-point geometry at atmospheric pressure in air and in H2-air mixtures. Experimentally, three discharge regimes have been observed for NRPD in air at atmospheric pressure for the temperature range Tg = 300 to 1000 K: corona, glow and spark. To study these regimes, first, we have considered a discharge occurring during one of the nanosecond voltage pulses. We have shown that a key parameter for the transition between the discharge regimes is the ratio between the connection-time of positive and negative discharges initiated at point electrodes and the pulse duration. In a second step, we have studied the dynamics of charged species during the interpulse at Tg = 300 and 1000 K and we have shown that the discharge characteristics during a given voltage pulse remain rather close whatever the preionization level (in the range 109-1011 cm3) left by previous discharges. Then, we have simulated several consecutive nanosecond voltage pulses at Tg = 1000 K at a repetition frequency of 10 kHz. We have shown that in a few voltage pulses, the discharge reaches a stable quasi-periodic glow regime observed in the experiments. We have studied the nanosecond spark discharge regime. We have shown that the fraction of the discharge energy going to fast heating is in the range 20%- 30%. Due to this fast heating, we have observed the propagation of a cylindrical shockwave followed by the formation of a hot channel in the path of the discharge that expands radially on short timescales (t


Experimental Study of the Effects of Nanosecond-pulsed Non-equilibrium Plasmas on Low-pressure, Laminar, Premixed Flames

Experimental Study of the Effects of Nanosecond-pulsed Non-equilibrium Plasmas on Low-pressure, Laminar, Premixed Flames

Author: Ting Li

Publisher:

Published: 2014

Total Pages: 194

ISBN-13:

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In this dissertation, the effects of nanosecond, repetitively-pulsed, non-equilibrium plasma discharges on laminar, low-pressure, premixed burner-stabilized hydrogen/O2/N2 and hydrocarbon/O2/N2 flames is investigated using optical and laser-based diagnostics and kinetic modeling. Two different plasma sources, both of which generate uniform, low-temperature, volumetric, non-equilibrium plasma discharges, are used to study changes in temperature and radical species concentrations when non-equilibrium plasmas are directly coupled to conventional hydrogen/hydrocarbon oxidation and combustion chemistry. Emission spectroscopy measurements demonstrate number densities of excited state species such as OH*, CH*, and C2* increase considerably in the presence of the plasma, especially under lean flame conditions. Direct imaging indicates that during plasma discharge, lean hydrocarbon flames "move" upstream towards burner surface as indicated by a shift in the flame chemiluminescence. In addition, the flame chemiluminescence zones broaden. For the same plasma discharge and flame conditions, quantitative results using spatially-resolved OH laser-induced fluorescence (LIF), multi-line, OH LIF-thermometry, and O-atom two-photon laser-induced fluorescence (TALIF) show significant increases in ground-state OH and O concentrations in the preheating zones of the flame. More specifically, for a particular axial position downstream of the burner surface, the OH and O concentrations increase, which can be viewed as an effective "shift" of the OH and O profiles towards the burner surface. Conceivably, the increase in OH and O concentration is due to an enhancement of the lower-temperature kinetics including O-atom, H-atom and OH formation kinetics and temperature increase due to the presence of the low-temperature, non-equilibrium plasma. High-fidelity kinetic modeling demonstrates that the electric discharge generates significant amounts of O and possibly H atoms via direct electron impact, as well as quenching of excited species rather than pure thermal effect which is caused by Joule heating within the plasma. These processes accelerate chain-initiation and chain-branching reactions at low temperatures (i.e. in the preheat region upstream of the primary reaction zone in the present burner-stabilized flames) yielding increased levels of O, H, and OH. The effects of the plasma become more pronounced as the equivalence ratio is reduced which strongly suggest that the observed effect is due to plasma chemical processes (i.e. enhanced radical production) rather than Joule heating supports the kinetic modeling.


Non-thermal Plasmas in Flames and Other Inhomogeneous Environments

Non-thermal Plasmas in Flames and Other Inhomogeneous Environments

Author: Carmen Guerra García

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 244

ISBN-13:

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Non-thermal plasmas in non-uniform gases appear in several technological applications (plasma assisted combustion and aerodynamics, and plasma jets), as well as in natural phenomena (sprites). Whereas in the case of plasma jets and sprites this problem has captured significant attention, the implications of an inhomogeneous background gas in the other fields need to be further explored. In particular, non-thermal plasmas used to assist or stabilize flames are subject to gradients in temperature, composition and pre-ionization, which impact the electrical breakdown characteristics and the energy coupling to the flame and its flow field. In this dissertation, the impact of such inhomogeneities in the breakdown modes of repetitive pulsed nanosecond discharges, one of the main strategies used for plasma creation in the field of plasma assisted combustion, is explored. First, a simplified non-reacting platform is proposed that consists on a sandwich-like structure of gases with different ionization properties, due to differences in composition or temperature. In this configuration, selective breakdown of a region of favorable ionization was experimentally observed, even when this region was not in contact with the electrodes. A numerical model was used to explain the dynamics of streamers at the interface of two distinct gases, within the layered gas configuration. Many similarities with traditional dielectric barrier discharges are revealed, where the role of the solid dielectric is played by the more insulating gas. The experiments were then extended to a counterflow nonpremixed flame environment for which selective excitation of the flame was also observed. Such a strategy ensures that the plasma-created radicals and short-lived species participate in the combustion reactions, but it is achieved at the expense of a limited energy deposition. Finally, a discussion of experimental observations using AC voltage in the kHz range on the counterflow nonpremixed flame, highlights the role of the finite size of the pre-ionization zone on the conversion of the electrical energy into kinetic energy of the flow (ionic winds).