Adiabatic Flame Temperature
Adiabatic Flame Temperature
Adiabatic Flame Temperature
For a combustion process that takes place adiabatically with no shaft work, the temperature of
the products is referred to as the adiabatic flame temperature. This is the maximum temperature
that can be achieved for given reactants. Heat transfer, incomplete combustion, and dissociation
all result in lower temperature. The maximum adiabatic flame temperature for a given fuel and
oxidizer combination occurs with a stoichiometric mixture (correct proportions such that all fuel
and all oxidizer are consumed). The amount of excess air can be tailored as part of the design to
control the adiabatic flame temperature. The considerable distance between present temperatures
in a gas turbine engine and the maximum adiabatic flame temperature at stoichiometric
conditions is shown in Figure 3.24(b), based on a compressor exit temperature of (922
K).
An initial view of the concept of adiabatic flame temperature is provided by examining two
reacting gases, at a given pressure, and asking what the end temperature is. The process is shown
schematically in Figure 15.3, where temperature is plotted versus the percentage completion of
the reaction. The initial state is and the final state is , with the final state at a higher
temperature than the initial state. The solid line in the figure shows a representation of the
``actual'' process.
To see how we would arrive at the final completion state the dashed lines break the state of
reaction change into two parts. Process (1) is reaction at constant and . To carry out such a
process, we would need to extract heat. Suppose the total amount of heat extracted per unit mass
For Process (2), we put this amount back into the products to raise their temperature to the final
level. For this process,
or, if we can approximate the specific heat as constant (using some appropriate average value)
For the overall process there is no work done and no heat exchanged so that the difference in
enthalpy between initial and final states is zero:
The temperature change during this second process is therefore given by (approximately)
(15..5)
The value of the adiabatic flame temperature given in Equation (15.5) is for 100% completion of
the reaction. In reality, as the temperature increases, the tendency is for the degree of reaction to
be less than 100%. For example, for the combustion of hydrogen and oxygen, at high
temperatures the combustion product (water) dissociates back into the simpler elemental
reactants. The degree of reaction is thus itself a function of temperature that needs to be
computed. We used this idea in discussing the stoichiometric ramjet, when we said that the
maximum temperature was independent of flight Mach number and hence of inlet stagnation
temperature. It is also to be emphasized that the idea of a constant (average) specific heat,
, is for illustration and not inherently part of the definition of adiabatic flame temperature.
(15..6)
heat transfer, , is needed. In this example we do not need step (i) because we are
already at the reference temperature.
3. Put back heat into the products of combustion. The resulting temperature is the
adiabatic flame temperature.
We can examine the terms in the SFEE separately, starting with the heat of formation terms, and
keeping track of units:
Gas
(kJ/kmole)
45
35
30
30
Using ,
where
Gas
Evolution of with (kJ/kmol)
Using
Plugging in the numbers shows the answer is between these two conditions. Linearly
interpolating gives a value of