Albuquerque Journal

New look at old data leads to cleaner engines

Sandia research used a massive data set of flames and fuel

- SANDIA LABS NEWS SERVICE

LIVERMORE, Calif. — New insights about how to understand and ultimately control the chemistry of ignition behavior and pollutant formation have been discovered in research led by Sandia National Laboratori­es. The discovery eventually will lead to cleaner, more efficient internal combustion engines.

“Our findings will allow the design of new fuels and improved combustion strategies,” said Nils Hansen, Sandia researcher and lead author of the research. “Making combustion cleaner and more efficient will have a huge impact, reducing energy use around the globe.”

The work, which focuses on the chemical science of low-pressure flame measuremen­ts, is featured in the Proceeding­s of the Combustion Institute and was selected as a distinguis­hed paper in Reaction Kinetics for the 37th Internatio­nal Symposium on Combustion. Authors include Hansen, Xiaoyu He, former Sandia intern Rachel Griggs and former Sandia postdoctor­al appointee Kai Moshammer, who is now at the Physikalis­ch-Technische Bundesanst­alt in Germany. The research was funded by the Department of Energy’s Office of Science.

Creating a massive data set of flames and fuels

The team combined the output from carefully controlled measuremen­ts on a wide range of fuels into a single categorize­d and annotated data set. Correlatio­ns among the 55 individual flames involving 30 different fuels were then used to reduce uncertaint­y, identify inconsiste­nt data and disentangl­e the effects of the fuel structure on chemical combustion­s pathways that lead to harmful pollutants. An initial analysis considered relationsh­ips among peak concentrat­ions of chemical intermedia­tes that play a role in molecular weight growth and eventual soot formation.

Hansen said that, to his knowledge, this is the first time that researcher­s have looked at these possibilit­ies. By identifyin­g inconsiste­ncies, the new methods ultimately should lead to better models for understand­ing combustion. Typically, well-controlled experiment­s help validate computer models to understand the combustion process and to develop new combustion strategies.

Data from low-pressure premixed flames is typically used to validate chemical kinetic mechanisms in combustion. These detailed mechanisms then provide the basis for understand­ing the formation of pollutants and predicting behavior for combustion applicatio­ns.

Historical­ly, research papers reported data from a single flame or a few flames, along with one new mechanism for a specific fuel. However, the approach pioneered by Hansen’s team paves the way for measuring a large number of flames and publishing numerous mechanisms that are not usually cross-validated with other data and mechanisms.

Hansen compares the discovery to the unearthing of an old artifact. Very few conclusion­s can be drawn from a single artifact. However, piecing together thousands of similar artifacts creates a more complete historical picture.

“Our work reveals informatio­n typically hidden in the ensemble of low-pressure flame data,” Hansen said. “For example, useful targets for model validation can be gleaned from a database with more than 30,000 data points.”

Analyzing flames

After analyzing the flames, researcher­s found that correlated properties provide new validation targets accessible only when examining the chemical structures of a wide set of low-pressure flames.

Hansen said the comprehens­ive chemical-kinetic models for combustion systems increasing­ly are used as the basis for engineerin­g models that predict fuel performanc­e and emissions for combustor design. These models are often ambiguous due to the large set of parameters used to inform the model, but synchrotro­n-based, singlephot­on ionization mass spectromet­ry measuremen­t, pioneered in DOE’s Gas Phase Chemical Physics program, has created an unpreceden­ted surge of detailed chemical data.

Long-term benefits

The work eventually will help to assemble more accurate chemical mechanisms for describing combustion processes, Hansen said.

“Our goal is to better understand and ultimately control the chemistry of ignition behavior and pollutant formation,” he said. “Subsequent­ly, this will lead to clean and efficient internal combustion engines.”

Hansen said that his team’s findings unlock an entirely new avenue for research at Sandia’s Combustion Research Facility.

“Applying data science and machinelea­rning tools extracts even more informatio­n from large data sets,” he said. “Our work has opened the gate wide to show that data science can be applied to combustion research.”

 ?? COURTESY OF DINO VOURNAS/ SANDIA LABS ?? Sandia National Laboratori­es researcher Nils Hansen, assembling equipment in the Combustion Research Facility, says new insights on how to control the chemistry of ignition behavior and pollutant formation will lead to the design of new fuels and improved combustion strategies.
COURTESY OF DINO VOURNAS/ SANDIA LABS Sandia National Laboratori­es researcher Nils Hansen, assembling equipment in the Combustion Research Facility, says new insights on how to control the chemistry of ignition behavior and pollutant formation will lead to the design of new fuels and improved combustion strategies.

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