Combustion and Flame, Vol.156, No.9, 1735-1743, 2009
Measurement of laminar burning speeds and Markstein lengths using a novel methodology
Three different methodologies used for the extraction of laminar information are compared and discussed. Starting from an asymptotic analysis assuming a linear relation between the propagation speed and the stretch acting on the flame front, temporal radius evolutions of spherically expanding laminar flames are postprocessed to obtain laminar burning velocities and Markstein lengths. The first methodology fits the temporal radius evolution with a polynomial function, while the new methodology proposed uses the exact solution of the linear relation linking the flame speed and the stretch as a fit. The last methodology consists in an analytical resolution of the problem. To test the different methodologies, experiments were carried Out in a stainless steel combustion chamber with methane/air mixtures at atmospheric pressure and ambient temperature. The equivalence ratio was varied from 0.55 to 1.1 The classical shadowgraph technique was used to detect the reaction zone. The new methodology has proven to be the Must robust and provides the most accurate results, while the polynomial methodology induces some errors due to the differentiation process. As original radii are used in the analytical methodology, it is more affected by the experimental radius determination. Finally. laminar burning velocity and Markstein length values determined with the new methodology are compared with results reported in the literature. (C) 2009 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.