1 / 2

Kinetics of Combustion Related Processes

Kinetics of Combustion Related Processes. Investigator: John H. Kiefer, Department of Chemical Engineering Prime Grant Support: U. S. Department of Energy.

inga
Download Presentation

Kinetics of Combustion Related Processes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Kinetics of Combustion Related Processes Investigator: John H. Kiefer, Department of Chemical Engineering Prime Grant Support: U. S. Department of Energy • Program involves use of shock tube with laser schlieren (LS), dump tank, GC/MS analysis and time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometry as diagnostics for exploration of reaction rates and energy transfer processes over an extremely wide range of T and P • We are interested primarily in energy transfer and the kinetics of unimolecular reactions at combustion temperatures, in particular the phenomena of unimolecular incubation and falloff • Measure density gradients in shock waves. • dr/dx directly proportional to rate of reaction • Technique has outstanding resolution, sensitivity and accuracy • Allows rate measurement for faster reactions and higher temperatures than any other technique • Measured non-statistical (non-RRKM) reaction rates for CF3CH3 dissociation; only such experimental study to date • Measured rates in very fast relaxation, incubation and dissociation for a large number of important combustion species • Developed a complete chemical kinetic model for ethane dissociation, a particularly important reaction in combustion systems • Estimated the heat of formation of t-butyl radical in neopentane (C5H12) dissociation; consequently developed a complete kinetic model • Future work: Study toluene decomposition, falloff in pyrolle and stilbene, extended use of our simple method to extract energy transfer rates

  2. Studies on Fluid-Particle Systems Raffi M. Turian, Chemical Engineering Department Prime Grant Support: NSF, DOE, EPA, International Fine Particle Research Institute • Prediction of Effective Properties of Suspensions from Properties of Constituents. • Prediction of Flow Regimes and Transition Velocities in Slurry Transport and Design of Coal Slurry Pipelines. • Cleaning, De-watering of Fine Coal.and Formulation of Coal-Water Fuels (CWF). • Design of Vitrification Processes for Nuclear Waste Disposal. • Measurement and Correlation of Effective Properties of Solid-Liquid Suspensions. • Experiments and Modeling of Flow of Highly-Loaded Coarse-Particle Slurries through Piping Systems. • Rheology and Flow of Concentrated Fine-Particle and Colloidal Suspensions. • Experiments and Modeling of Filtration and De-watering of Fine Particulate Materials. • Developed a Comprehensive Self-consistent Slurry Flow-Regime Delineation Scheme. • Established Correlations for Prediction of Effective Properties and Friction Losses for Slurries. • Developed Methodologies for Design of Slurry Pipelines and Vitrification Processes. • Developed Methods for Enhancing Dewatering, and Formulation of CWF.

More Related