Flame Quenching Limits of Hydrogen Leaks

被引:3
|
作者
Butler, M. S. [1 ]
Axelbaum, R. L. [1 ]
Moran, C. W. [2 ]
Sunderland, P. B. [2 ]
机构
[1] Washington Univ, St Louis, MO 63130 USA
[2] Univ Maryland, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
关键词
D O I
10.4271/2008-01-0726
中图分类号
U [交通运输];
学科分类号
08 ; 0823 ;
摘要
This study examines the types of hydrogen leaks that can support combustion. Hydrogen, methane, and propane diffusion flames on round burners and leaky compression fittings were observed. Measurements included limits of quenching and blowoff for round burners with diameters of 0.006 - 3.18 mm. The measured mass flow rates at the quenching limits were found to be generally independent of burner diameter at relatively large burner diameters. In terms of mass flow rate, hydrogen had the lowest quenching limit and the highest blowoff limit of the fuels considered, which means that there are high and low flow rates where hydrogen is able to support a flame while methane and propane are not able to. The quenching limits for hydrogen diffusion flames on round burners with thick walls were found to be higher than for thin walls. The limits were also found to be independent of burner orientation; leaks with low flow rates are able to support flames independent of their orientation. The minimum mass flow rate of hydrogen that can support combustion from a leaking compression fitting was found to be 0.028 mg/s. This flow was independent of pressure (up to 131 bar) and about an order of magnitude lower than the corresponding methane and propane flow rates. The implications for fire safety are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:605 / 612
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] INFLUENCE OF PRESSURE ON THE FLAMMABILITY LIMITS OF HYDROGEN - EFFECTS OF VESSEL SIZE AND DIRECTION OF FLAME PROPAGATION
    NAGAI, H
    URANO, Y
    TOKUHASHI, K
    HORIGUCHI, S
    KONDO, S
    NIPPON KAGAKU KAISHI, 1992, (12) : 1492 - 1500
  • [42] Flame quenching by crimped ribbon flame arrestor: A brief review
    Wang, Lu-Qing
    Ma, Hong-Hao
    Shen, Zhao-Wu
    Chen, Dai-Guo
    PROCESS SAFETY PROGRESS, 2019, 38 (01) : 27 - 41
  • [43] Inflammation and myeloid malignancy: quenching the flame
    Stubbins, Ryan J.
    Platzbecker, Uwe
    Karsan, Aly
    BLOOD, 2022, 140 (10) : 1067 - 1074
  • [44] Partial premixing in diffusion flame quenching
    Favier, V
    Vervisch, L
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ANGEWANDTE MATHEMATIK UND MECHANIK, 2001, 81 : S525 - S526
  • [45] Flame quenching through endothermic reaction
    A. Lazarovici
    S. Kalliadasis
    J.H. Merkin
    S.K. Scott
    Journal of Engineering Mathematics, 2002, 44 : 207 - 228
  • [46] Flame quenching through endothermic reaction
    Lazarovici, A
    Kalliadasis, S
    Merkin, JH
    Scott, SK
    JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS, 2002, 44 (03) : 207 - 228
  • [47] Quenching of Flame Propagation with Heat Loss
    Peter L. Simon
    Serafim Kalliadasis
    John H. Merkin
    Stephen K. Scott
    Journal of Mathematical Chemistry, 2002, 31 : 313 - 332
  • [48] UNDERSTAND FLAME AND EXPLOSION QUENCHING SPEEDS
    MENDOZA, VA
    SMOLENSKY, VG
    STRAITZ, JF
    CHEMICAL ENGINEERING PROGRESS, 1993, 89 (05) : 38 - 41
  • [49] FLAME QUENCHING IN CONVERGING RECTANGULAR CHANNELS
    BERLAD, AL
    ROWE, RD
    YANG, CH
    COMBUSTION AND FLAME, 1959, 3 (04) : 477 - 480
  • [50] MORPHOLOGY OF A PRODUCT OF LIQUID FLAME QUENCHING
    LESNIKOVICH, AI
    PRINTSEV, GV
    KHIMICHESKAYA FIZIKA, 1990, 9 (12): : 1648 - 1652