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Author
Ronney, P. D.
Title
Effect of Gravity on Laminar Premixed Gas Combustion II: Ignition and Extinction Phenomena.
Coporate
Massachusetts Inst. of Technology, Cambridge, MA
Journal
Combustion and Flame, Vol. 62, No. 2, 121-133, November 1985
Sponsor
NASA-Lewis Research Center, Cleveland, OH
Contract
GRANT-NAG3-173
Keywords
gravity | ignition | flame propagation | flammability limits | minimum ignition energy
Identifiers
zero gravity
Abstract
Minimum ignition energies and flame radii as a function of time were measured for near-limit, limit, and sublimit fuel-lean methane-air mixtures burning at one-g and zero-g. Minimum ignition energy values were the same at one-g and zero-g except for mixtures very near the zero-g flammability limit and leaner, where the zero-g values were much higher than the one-g values. For sublimit mixtures at zero-g a previously unreported mode of unstable flame propagation was observed; this mode was characterized by a flame radius increasing in proportion to the square root of the time lapse from ignition, an energy release often orders of magnitude greater than the spark energy input, and sudden extinction. This mode of flame propagation was observed at all gas pressures tested but was more pronounced at higher pressures. All zero-g propagation was sphericxally symmetric except for a few unusual flame extinguishants at high pressures. The principal conclusions are that flame extinguishant at zero-g is caused by a flame-front instability and that gravitational forces have a stabilizing effect on upward flame propagation. The cause of the instability could not be determined; further experiments which might aid in determining the cause are suggested.