Combustion of hydrocarbon fuels is traditionally separated into slow reaction, cool flame, and ignition regimes based on pressure and temperature. Standard tests, such as the ASTM E659, are used to determine the lowest temperature required to ignite a specific fuel mixed with air at atmospheric pressure. It is expected that the initial pressure and the rate at which the mixture is heated also influences the limiting temperature and the type of combustion. This study investigates the effect of heating rate, between 4 and 15 K/min, and initial pressure, in the range of 25–100 kPa, on ignition of n-hexane air mixtures. Mixtures with equivalence ratio ranging from Φ = 0.6 to Φ = 1.2 were investigated. The problem is also modeled computationally...
Addressing the energy crisis motivates our society to develop alternative sources of energy beyond f...
The effect of thermal stratification on the ignition of a lean homogeneous n-heptane/air mixture at ...
Usually different autoignition modes can be generated by a hot spot in which ignition occurs earlier...
Combustion of hydrocarbon fuels is traditionally separated into slow reaction, cool flame, and ignit...
Accidental ignition of flammable gases is a critical safety concern in many industrial applications....
n-Hexane is an easy-to-use fuel for laboratory investigations of hydrocarbon vapor explosions and ha...
An experimental investigation is conducted to analyze hot-surface ignition of n-hexane-air mixtures....
Explosion hazards exist in many industrial sectors including chemical processing, mining, nuclear po...
The present study examines the possibility of inerting flammable mixtures (making the mixtures non-e...
The effects of initial pressure and temperature on the laminar burning speed of n-hexane-air mixture...
An empirical four-step mechanism has previously been proposed for describing ignition of heptane-air...
Normal alkanes constitute a significant fraction of transportation fuels, and are the primary driver...
Hot surface ignition is relevant in the context of industrial safety. In the present work, two-dimen...
The risk of igniting a flammable mixture in fuel tank vapor space is a major concern in aviation saf...
Ignition delay times for n-hexane oxidation have been measured in a rapid compression machine (RCM) ...
Addressing the energy crisis motivates our society to develop alternative sources of energy beyond f...
The effect of thermal stratification on the ignition of a lean homogeneous n-heptane/air mixture at ...
Usually different autoignition modes can be generated by a hot spot in which ignition occurs earlier...
Combustion of hydrocarbon fuels is traditionally separated into slow reaction, cool flame, and ignit...
Accidental ignition of flammable gases is a critical safety concern in many industrial applications....
n-Hexane is an easy-to-use fuel for laboratory investigations of hydrocarbon vapor explosions and ha...
An experimental investigation is conducted to analyze hot-surface ignition of n-hexane-air mixtures....
Explosion hazards exist in many industrial sectors including chemical processing, mining, nuclear po...
The present study examines the possibility of inerting flammable mixtures (making the mixtures non-e...
The effects of initial pressure and temperature on the laminar burning speed of n-hexane-air mixture...
An empirical four-step mechanism has previously been proposed for describing ignition of heptane-air...
Normal alkanes constitute a significant fraction of transportation fuels, and are the primary driver...
Hot surface ignition is relevant in the context of industrial safety. In the present work, two-dimen...
The risk of igniting a flammable mixture in fuel tank vapor space is a major concern in aviation saf...
Ignition delay times for n-hexane oxidation have been measured in a rapid compression machine (RCM) ...
Addressing the energy crisis motivates our society to develop alternative sources of energy beyond f...
The effect of thermal stratification on the ignition of a lean homogeneous n-heptane/air mixture at ...
Usually different autoignition modes can be generated by a hot spot in which ignition occurs earlier...