Experimental Assessment of the Effects of Gas Composition on Volatile Flames of Coal and Biomass Particles in Oxyfuel Combustion Using Multi-Parameter Optical Diagnostics
Experimental Assessment of the Effects of Gas Composition on Volatile Flames of Coal and Biomass Particles in Oxyfuel Combustion Using Multi-Parameter Optical Diagnostics
This experimental study examines the particle-level combustion behavior of high-volatile bituminous coal and walnut shell particles in oxyfuel environments, with a particular focus on the gas-phase ignition characteristics and the structural development of volatile flames. Particles with similar size and shape distributions (a median diameter of about 126 µm and an aspect ratio of around 1.5) are combusted in hot flows generated using lean, flat flames, where the oxygen mole fraction is systematically varied in both CO₂/O₂ and N₂/O₂ atmospheres while maintaining comparable gas temperatures and particle heating rates. The investigation employs a high-speed multi-camera diagnostic system combining laser-induced fluorescence of OH, diffuse backlight-illumination, and Mie scattering to simultaneously measure the particle size, shape, and velocity; the ignition delay time; and the volatile flame dynamics during early-stage volatile combustion. Advanced detection algorithms enable the extraction of these multiple parameters from spatiotemporally synchronized measurements. The results reveal that the ignition delay time decreases with an increasing oxygen mole fraction up to 30 vol%, beyond which point further oxygen enrichment no longer accelerates the ignition, as the process becomes limited by the volatile release rate. In contrast, the reactivity of volatile flames shows continuous enhancement with an increasing oxygen mole fraction, indicating non-premixed flame behavior governed by the diffusion of oxygen toward the particles. The analysis of the flame stand-off distance demonstrates that volatile flames burn closer to the particles at higher oxygen mole fractions, consistent with the expected scaling of O₂ diffusion with its partial pressure. Notably, walnut shell and coal particles exhibit remarkably similar ignition delay times, volatile flame sizes, and OH-LIF intensities. The substitution of N₂ with CO₂ produces minimal differences, suggesting that for 126 µm particles under high-heating-rate conditions, the relatively small variations in the heat capacity and O₂ diffusivity between these diluents have negligible effects on the homogeneous combustion phenomena observed.

