Combustion - Related Fuel Properties
Combustion - Related Fuel Properties
Combustion - Related Fuel Properties
Course Outcome ;
• relative density
• calorific value
• flammability limit
• oxygen requirement
• ignition temperature
• emission properties
Typical Composition of Coal
Peat 44 65 20 4
Lignite 57 50 15 4
Bituminous 82 25 2 5
Anthracite 90 4 1 3
Typical Crude Oil Composition
– Gasoline C4 to C10 27 w t%
– Kerosene C11 to C13 13 wt %
– Diesel C14 to C18 12 wt %
– Heavy gas oil C19 to C25 10 wt%
– Lubricating oil C26-C40 20 wt %
– Residue >C40 18 wt %
Typical Natural Gas Composition
Component Range (vol %)
Methane 87.0 - 97.0
Ethane 1.5 - 7.0
Propane 0.1 - 1.5
iso - Butane 0.01 - 0.3
normal - Butane 0.01 - 0.3
iso - Pentane trace - 0.04
normal - Pentane trace - 0.04
Hexanes plus trace - 0.06
Nitrogen 0.2 - 5.5
Carbon Dioxide 0.1 - 1.0
Oxygen 0.01 - 0.1
Hydrogen trace - 0.02
• Typical Malaysian hydrocarbon gas compositions
NG
LPG
Specific Gravity (SG)
• SG of a fuel is the ratio between the gas fuel density and the dry air density
of at the same condition (P and T )
ρ fuel
SG =
ρair
• In the gas industry, standard conditions of P & T are 101.3 kPa and 15oC
• SG depends very much on its gas mixture composition
– SG of a gas determines whether gas will rise or fall when released in the air
ΔP
– Effect on the flow of gases through orifices (do) or pipe : V = kd o
SG
CV
– Rating of burners – burner conversion (Wobbe Index): WI =
SG
• SG of multi-components fuel can be calculated as follows
Example 1
– Lower or net CV (LCV or LHV) – when vapour water as a combustion product - the
difference between higher CV and the heat absorbed (latent heat) by water in having its
phase changing to vapour
• ˆ…...hence
Negative of standard heat of combustion, ΔH
o
CV is always positive
c
• The more carbon and hydrogen atoms in each molecule of a fuel the higher will be
its CV or heating value
• The larger the amount of inert matters, such as nitrogen and carbon dioxide, or
water content, present in a fuel the lower the CV will be
HCV
SUBSTANCE NET CV (KCAL/SCM) GROSS CV (KCAL/SCM)
= 802,310 kJ/kmol
Example 2
• For a given pressure of fuel gas at the burner, the volumetric flow rate (V) is inversely
proportional to the square root of the density of the gas, r, hence specific gravity
(SG)…thus the heat released can be expressed as
CV CV
Vα ....and WI = is known as Wobbe number or index (WI)
SG SG
• Wobbe Index is also known as FUEL INTERCHNGEABILITY PARAMETER.
• For the same pressure at the burner, gases of equal Wobbe Number (WI) will generate
heat at equal rate per unit burner port area
– Hence, gaseous fuels having the same WI can be interchanged with no significant
physical changes to the burner. (CHAP 6 : BURNER CONVERSION)
• Wobbe Index of gas mixture
CVmix
WI mix =
SG mix
CVmix = Yi CVi SG mix = Yi SG i
i i
• A mixture is flammable only when the composition is between the LFL and the UFL.
Commonly used units are volume percent fuel (percentage of fuel plus air).
• Lower explosion limit (LEL) and upper explosion limit (DEL) are used
interchangeably with LFL and UFL
Stoichiomteric limit
• Flammable range for fuel-air & fuel-oxygen mixtures at 1 atm. and 25°C
Mixture Flammability Limits
Lower flammability limits (or upper) for fuel mixtures may be calculated by
Le Chatelier's law
FLmix (%) =
100%
y 1 + y 2 + y 3 + ........ y i
l1 l2 l3 li
where
100
LFLmix = n
yi
i =1 LFLi
100
StoicFLmix = n
yi
i =1
SFL i
Example 4
100 100
LFLmix = = 5.44 % vol
n
yi 30 45 25
+ +
i =1 LFL i 12.5 4 5.3
100
UFL mix = n 37.42 % vol
yi
i =1 UFL i
29
100 mol fuel i
StoicFL mix = SFL i ~ x 100
n
yi mol fuel i + mole air
i =1 SFL i
mol CH 4
SFL CH 4 ~ x 100
mol CH 4 + mole air
CH 4 + 2O 2 → CO 2 +2H 2 O
1 mol CH 4
SFL CH 4 ~ x 100 ~ 9.5 % vol
mole air
1 mol CH 4 + 2 mol O 2 x
0.21 mol O 2
100 100
SFL mix = = 19.35 % vol
n
yi 30 45 25
+ +
i =1 SFL i 29.58 29.58 9.5
30
• LFL of flammable liquid can be estimated from Flash
Point:
0.75
LFLT = LFL25 − (T − 25)
H c
0.75
UFLT = UFL25 + (T − 25)
H c
Where,
Hc is the net heating or calorific
(kcal/mole), and T is temperature in oC
• For hydrocarbons in air , changes in initial pressure will
not change the LFL significantly, but the UFL will
dramatically increase
37
i. What are the LFL and UFL of a fuel-air mixture composed of 1% methane, 2% ethane and
3% propane by volume at 25°C at 1 atmosphere (abs). Is this gas mixture flammable?
0.75 0.75
LFLT = LFL25 − (T − 25) UFLT = UFL25 + (T − 25)
H c H c
Hc yIHc
mol % LFL UFL T LFL UFL
(kcal/mol) (kcal/mol)
39
iii. What is the UFL of a fuel-air mixture composed of 1% methane, 2% ethane and
3% propane by volume at 25oC and 200 atmospheres (abs) ?
LFL UFL
Hc,i Hc,mixture,i LFL (ToC, LFL (ToC, P
(25 C, 1 (25oC, 1 T (oC)
o
UFL
(kcal/mol) (kcal/mol) 1 atm) 1 atm) (MPa)
atm) atm)
C H O
CH4 100 1 4 2 5.3 10.6
C2H6 100 2 6 3.5 3 10.5
C4H10 100 4 10 6.5 1.9 12.35
45
Flammability Limits – Diluent Effect
• Presence of diluent such as CO2, N2 in a mixture of gases
narrows down the flammability limits by increasing the
lower limit
• Flammability limit of combustibles containing diluent
100
FL mix ,dil = FL mix
100 − y dil
10 % CO
55 % H2
25 % CH4
5 % CO2
5 % N2
100
FLmix =
100
FLmix,dil = FLmix
100 − Ydil
y1 y 2 y3 y
+ + + ....... i
FL1 FL2 FL3 FLi
y1, y2…yi = vol.% of combustibles in the diluent free fuel mixture
l1, l2…li = vol. % flammability limit (lower or upper) of pure combustible in air
Yi
x 100
100 −Y dil
Flammability
zone
• When a flammable mixture is heated up to a certain
temperature, the chemical reaction will start spontaneously -
this critical temperature for fuel-oxidiser is called the auto-
ignition temperature, AIT.
• The rate of flame surface propagation into the un-burnt combustible mixture
to ensure continuous and successful flame propagation - Also known as
burning velocity or combustion velocity
• Flame velocity depends on the fuel-air mixture composition and attains
maximum for mixture slightly richer in fuel content than the stoichiometric
composition….. and rises if the initial temperature is increased or the
pressure of the system is decreased
Flame Temperature
• The temperature of the flame corresponds to heat generated during
combustion process
• Flame temperature of fuel depends on
– Calorific value
– Volume and specific heat of total gaseous products
– Losses by radiation
– Latent heat in water vapour in the combustion products