Combustion and Flame | 2019
High-temperature laminar flame speed measurements in a shock tube
Abstract
Abstract High-temperature methane and propane laminar flame speed measurements were conducted behind reflected shock waves in a shock tube. A high-power Nd:YAG laser was used to spark-ignite the shock-heated gas mixtures and initiate laminar flame propagation. High-speed, OH* endwall imaging was used to record the propagation of the spherically expanding flames in time, and a non-linear stretch correlation was applied and used to determine the unburned, unstretched laminar flame speed. “Low-temperature” ( 750\xa0K) flame speed results are presented for a propane/21% O2-47% N2-32% He mixture (ϕ = 0.8) at initial unburned gas conditions of 764–832\xa0K, 1\xa0atm. The high-temperature measurements fall between kinetic model predictions, but the kinetic model results show significant disagreement, highlighting the need for high-temperature flame speed validation data of this kind. We believe that these results represent the first laminar flame speed measurements conducted in a shock tube, and that the high-temperature results are the highest-temperature, 1-atm flame speed measurements available in the literature.