Estimated electric conductivities of thermal plasma for air-fuel combustion and oxy-fuel combustion with potassium or cesium seeding
Osama A. Marzouk

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive model to estimate the electric conductivity of seeded combustion gases, crucial for magnetohydrodynamic power generation, considering various fuels, oxidizers, and seed materials across a temperature range.
Contribution
The paper introduces a detailed thermal ionization model for predicting electric conductivity in seeded combustion gases, incorporating electron scattering mechanisms and validated against experimental data.
Findings
Electric conductivity varies significantly with temperature, fuel, oxidizer, and seed type.
Potassium seeding yields lower conductivity than cesium at the same conditions.
Replacing potassium with cesium increases conductivity by a factor of about 3.6 at 2000 K.
Abstract
A complete model for estimating the electric conductivity of combustion product gases, with added cesium (Cs) or potassium (K) vapor for ionization, is presented. Neutral carrier gases serve as the bulk fluid that carries the seed material, as well as the electrons generated by the partial thermal (equilibrium) ionization of the seed alkali metal. The model accounts for electron-neutral scattering, as well as electron-ion and electron-electron scattering. The model is tested through comparison with published data. The model is aimed at being utilized for the plasma within magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) channels, where direct power extraction from passing electrically conducting plasma gas enables electric power generation. The thermal ionization model is then used to estimate the electric conductivity of seeded combustion gases under complete combustion of three selected fuels, namely:…
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