Effect of flame retardants on side-wall quenching of partially premixed laminar flames
Matthias Steinhausen, Federica Ferraro, Max Schneider and, Florian Zentgraf, Max Greifenstein, Andreas Dreizler, Christian, Hasse, Arne Scholtissek

TL;DR
This study combines experiments and simulations to analyze how flame retardants influence the behavior and heat transfer of partially premixed laminar flames during side-wall quenching, revealing reduced heat flux and altered flame structure.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the effects of flame retardants on flame-wall interactions and heat transfer in partially premixed flames through combined experimental and numerical approaches.
Findings
Flame stabilizes further from the wall with more DMMP.
Maximum wall heat flux is significantly reduced by flame retardants.
Intermediate species HOPO accumulates at the wall during flame retardant addition.
Abstract
A combined experimental and numerical investigation of partially premixed laminar methane-air flames undergoing side-wall quenching (SWQ) is performed. A well-established SWQ burner is adapted to allow the seeding of the main flow with additional gaseous products issued from a (secondary) wall inlet close to the flame's quenching point. First, the characteristics of the partially premixed flame that quenches at the wall are assessed using planar laser-induced fluorescence measurements of the OH radical, and a corresponding numerical simulation with fully-resolved transport and chemistry is conducted. A boundary layer of enriched mixture is formed at the wall, leading to a reaction zone parallel to the wall for high injection rates from the wall inlet. Subsequently, in a numerical study, the wall inflow is mixed with dimethylmethylphosphonat (DMMP), a phosphor-based flame retardant. The…
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