TY - JOUR
T1 - Study on laser ignition and combustion characteristics of micron-sized aluminum and Al-Mg alloys particles
AU - Hou, Fengting
AU - Zhang, Beichen
AU - Feng, Muyang
AU - Liu, Shuwei
AU - Li, Shipeng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - In response to the problems of easy sintering and long ignition delay time of micron aluminum in the combustion of aluminum-containing propellants, choose the way to add magnesium to metal aluminum to construct an alloy system, through boiling, micro-explosions are generated during the ignition and combustion process to weaken the sintering behavior and shorten the ignition delay time of aluminum. Selecting aluminum and Al-Mg alloy powder fuel with a particle diameter of about 10 μm as the research object, a set of individual-particle fuel laser ignition and microscopic high-speed imaging experimental devices was built that can observe the whole process of ignition and combustion of micron-sized fuel. Thermal analysis was used to detect and characterize the thermal decomposition process of micron-sized aluminum and Al-Mg alloy powders; combined with the results of scanning electron microscopy, the difference in ignition performance of micron-sized individual particle aluminum and Al-Mg alloys was studied. Experiments have found that, compared with aluminum, the initial oxidation temperature of Al-Mg alloys is lower and the combustion is more complete. However, the effect of adding magnesium to aluminum is only reflected before 900 °C. The ignition and combustion images and flame propagation laws of micron-sized single-particle aluminum and Al-Mg alloys were obtained. It was found that adding magnesium shortened the ignition delay time, and the combustion produced less residual.
AB - In response to the problems of easy sintering and long ignition delay time of micron aluminum in the combustion of aluminum-containing propellants, choose the way to add magnesium to metal aluminum to construct an alloy system, through boiling, micro-explosions are generated during the ignition and combustion process to weaken the sintering behavior and shorten the ignition delay time of aluminum. Selecting aluminum and Al-Mg alloy powder fuel with a particle diameter of about 10 μm as the research object, a set of individual-particle fuel laser ignition and microscopic high-speed imaging experimental devices was built that can observe the whole process of ignition and combustion of micron-sized fuel. Thermal analysis was used to detect and characterize the thermal decomposition process of micron-sized aluminum and Al-Mg alloy powders; combined with the results of scanning electron microscopy, the difference in ignition performance of micron-sized individual particle aluminum and Al-Mg alloys was studied. Experiments have found that, compared with aluminum, the initial oxidation temperature of Al-Mg alloys is lower and the combustion is more complete. However, the effect of adding magnesium to aluminum is only reflected before 900 °C. The ignition and combustion images and flame propagation laws of micron-sized single-particle aluminum and Al-Mg alloys were obtained. It was found that adding magnesium shortened the ignition delay time, and the combustion produced less residual.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85195107810&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/1742-6596/2746/1/012046
DO - 10.1088/1742-6596/2746/1/012046
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85195107810
SN - 1742-6588
VL - 2746
JO - Journal of Physics: Conference Series
JF - Journal of Physics: Conference Series
IS - 1
M1 - 012046
T2 - 14th Asia Conference on Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, ACMAE 2023
Y2 - 22 December 2023 through 24 December 2023
ER -