Transient Effects of Nanosecond Repetitively Pulsed Discharges on a Lean Premixed Flame
Abstract
The thermal and chemical effects of nanosecond discharges have been thoroughly investigated in previous work at atmospheric pressure in preheated air at 1000 K. N2 is excited by electron impact reactions, radicals and heat are produced via dissociative quenching of excited electronic states of N2 by O2. In this work, we extend these investigations to NRP discharges in partially burned, premixed methane-air flames. A burst of 500 discharges is applied to stabilize a 10-kW lean flame at atmospheric pressure. The shape of the flame is strongly modified by the heat and radicals produced by the discharge. We study the transient production of OH radicals and heat to identify the effects that promote flame stabilization. First, we record time-resolved OH* chemiluminescence images during the transition from a flame without plasma to the steady-state plasma-stabilized flame. Steady state is reached at the end of the burst. Then using calibrated optical emission spectroscopy, we measure the rotational temperature and the N2(C) number density evolution during the transient stabilization. Laser-Rayleigh scattering is also applied to confirm the gas temperature evolution obtained by emission spectroscopy.
This work is supported by ANR Grant PASTEC ANR16-CE22-0005.- Publication:
-
APS Annual Gaseous Electronics Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- 2020
- Bibcode:
- 2020APS..GECGT4007B