The influence of the flow of the reacting gas on the conditions for a thermal explosion

  1. G. I. Barenblatt,
  2. A. J. Chorin, and
  3. A. Kast
  1. Department of Mathematics, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720-3840
  1. Contributed by A. J. Chorin

Abstract

The classical problem of thermal explosion is modified so that the chemically active gas is not at rest but is flowing in a long cylindrical pipe. Up to a certain section the heat-conducting walls of the pipe are held at low temperature so that the reaction rate is small and there is no heat release; at that section the ambient temperature is increased and an exothermic reaction begins. The question is whether a slow reaction regime will be established or a thermal explosion will occur. The mathematical formulation of the problem is presented. It is shown that when the pipe radius is larger than a critical value, the solution of the new problem exists only up to a certain distance along the axis. The critical radius is determined by conditions in a problem with a uniform axial temperature. The loss of existence is interpreted as a thermal explosion; the critical distance is the safe reactor’s length. Both laminar and developed turbulent flow regimes are considered. In a computational experiment the loss of the existence appears as a divergence of a numerical procedure; numerical calculations reveal asymptotic scaling laws with simple powers for the critical distance.

Footnotes

« Previous | Next Article »Table of Contents