Dictionary Definition
combustion
Noun
1 a process in which a substance reacts with
oxygen to give heat and light [syn: burning]
2 a state of violent disturbance and excitement;
"combustion grew until revolt was unavoidable"
3 the act of burning something; "the burning of
leaves was prohibited by a town ordinance" [syn: burning]
User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
Noun
Synonyms
act or process of burningDerived terms
Hyponyms
Translations
the act or process of burning
- Czech: spalování
- Danish: forbrænding
- Finnish: palaminen, polttaminen, poltto
- German: Verbrennung
- Greek: καύση, ανάφλεξη
process wherein a fuel is combined with oxygen
- Danish: forbrænding
- Finnish: palaminen, polttaminen
- German: Verbrennung
- Greek: καύση
similar process where two chemicals are combined
- Danish: forbrænding
- Finnish: palaminen
- German: Verbrennung
- Greek: καύση
- ttbc Catalan: combustió f
- ttbc Dutch: verbranding f (1, 2)
- ttbc French: combustion
- ttbc Italian: combustione (1,2,3)
- ttbc Portuguese: combustão (1, 2)
- ttbc Spanish: combustión f
- ttbc Swedish: förbränning
French
Etymology
From combustionem (nominative of combustio), from comburere "to burn" (com- + *burere).Pronunciation
- /kɔ̃.bys.sjɔ̃/
Extensive Definition
Combustion or burning is a complex sequence of
exothermic chemical
reactions between a fuel
and an oxidant
accompanied by the production of heat or both heat and light in the form of either a glow
or flames.
Direct combustion by atmospheric oxygen is a
reaction mediated by radical
intermediates. The conditions for radical production are naturally
produced by thermal
runaway, where the heat generated by combustion is necessary to
maintain the high temperature necessary for radical
production.
In a complete combustion reaction, a compound
reacts with an oxidizing element, such as oxygen or fluorine, and the products are
compounds of each element in the fuel with the oxidizing element.
For example:
- + 2 → + 2
- + 6 → + 2chem HF +
A simpler example can be seen in the combustion
of hydrogen and
oxygen, which is a
commonly used reaction in rocket engines:
- 2 + → 2 + heat
In the large majority of the real world uses of
combustion, the oxygen (O2) oxidant is obtained from the ambient
air and the resultant flue gas from
the combustion will contain nitrogen:
- + 2 + 7.52 → + 2 + 7.52 + heat
As can be seen, when air is the source of the
oxygen, nitrogen is by far the largest part of the resultant flue
gas.
In reality, combustion processes are never
perfect or complete. In flue gases from combustion of carbon (as in coal combustion) or carbon compounds (as in combustion of
hydrocarbons,
wood etc.) both unburned
carbon (as soot) and carbon
compounds (CO and
others) will be present. Also, when air is the oxidant, some
nitrogen will be oxidized to various nitrogen
oxides (NOx).
Types
Rapid
Rapid combustion is a form of combustion in which large amounts of heat and light energy are released, which often results in a fire. This is used in a form of machinery such as internal combustion engines and in thermobaric weapons. Sometimes, a large volume of gas is liberated in combustion besides the production of heat and light.The sudden evolution of large quantities of gas creates excessive pressure that produces a loud noise.Such a combustion is known as an explosion.Slow
Slow combustion is a form of combustion which
takes place at low temperatures. Cellular
respiration is an example of slow combustion.
Complete
In complete combustion, the reactant will burn in oxygen, producing a limited number of products. When a hydrocarbon burns in oxygen, the reaction will only yield carbon dioxide and water. When a hydrocarbon or any fuel burns in air, the combustion products will also include nitrogen. When elements such as carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, and iron are burned, they will yield the most common oxides. Carbon will yield carbon dioxide. Nitrogen will yield nitrogen dioxide. Sulfur will yield sulfur dioxide. Iron will yield iron(III) oxide. It should be noted that complete combustion is almost impossible to achieve. In reality, as actual combustion reactions come to equilibrium, a wide variety of major and minor species will be present. For example, the combustion of methane in air will yield, in addition to the major products of carbon dioxide and water, the minor product carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxides, which are products of a side reaction (oxidation of nitrogen).Turbulent
Turbulent combustion is a combustion
characterized by turbulent flows. It is the most used for
industrial application (e.g. gas turbines, diesel engines, etc.)
because the turbulence helps the mixing process between the fuel
and oxidizer.
Microgravity
Nearly every Flame behaves
differently in the Microgravity
environment. Microgravity combustion research contributes to
understanding of spacecraft fire safety and diverse aspects of
combustion physics.
Incomplete
Incomplete combustion occurs when there isn't
enough oxygen to allow the fuel (usually a hydrocarbon) to react
completely with the oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water,
also when the combustion is quenched by a heat sink such as a solid
surface or flame trap. When a hydrocarbon burns in air, the
reaction will yield carbon
dioxide, water, carbon
monoxide, pure carbon (soot or ash) and various other compounds
such as nitrogen
oxides.
The quality of combustion can be improved by
design of combustion devices, such as burners and
internal combustion engines. Further improvements are
achievable by catalytic after-burning
devices (such as catalytic
converters) or by the simple partial return of the exhaust
gases into the combustion process. Such devices are required by
environmental
legislation for cars in most countries, and may be necessary in
large combustion devices, such as thermal
power plants, to reach legal emission
standards.
The degree of combustion can be measured and
analyzed, with test equipment. HVAC contractors,
firemen and engineers use combustion
analyzers to test the efficiency of a burner during
the combustion process. In addition, the efficiency of an internal
combustion engine can be measured in this way, and some states and
local municipalities are using combustion analysis to define and
rate the efficiency of vehicles on the road today.
Smouldering
Smouldering
combustion is a flameless form of combustion, deriving its heat
from heterogeneous reactions occurring on the surface of a solid
fuel when heated in an oxidizing environment. The fundamental
difference between smouldering and flaming combustion is that in
smouldering, the oxidation of the reactant species occurs on the
surface of the solid rather than in the gas phase. The
characteristic temperature and heat released during smouldering are
low compared to those in the flaming combustion of a solid. Typical
values in smouldering are around 600 °C for the peak temperature
and 5 kJ/g-O2 for the heat released; typical values during flaming
are around 1500 °C and 13 kJ/g-O2 respectively. These
characteristics cause smoulder to propagate at low velocities,
typically around 0.1 mm/s, which is about two orders of magnitude
lower than the velocity of flame spread over a solid. In spite of
its weak combustion characteristics, smouldering is a significant
fire hazard.
Combustion with other oxidants
Oxygen can be assumed as the oxidant when talking about combustion, but other oxidants exist. Nitrous oxide is used in rockets and in motorsport; it produces oxygen at over 1300 C. Fluorine, another oxidizing element, can produce a combustion reaction, to produce fluorinated products (rather than oxides). For example, mixtures of gaseous fluorine and methane are explosive, just like mixtures of oxygen and methane. Chlorine trifluoride is a strong fluorinating agent that ignites fuels more readily than oxygen.Chemical equation
Generally, the chemical
equation for stoichiometric
burning of hydrocarbon in oxygen is as
follows:
- C_xH_y + \left( x + \frac \right) O_2 \rightarrow \; xCO_2 + \left( \frac \right) H_2O
For example, the burning of propane is:
- C_3H_8 + 5O_2 \rightarrow \; 3CO_2 + 4H_2O
The simple word equation for the combustion of a
hydrocarbon in oxygen is:
- \textrm + \textrm \rightarrow \; \textrm + \textrm + \textrm
If the combustion takes place using air as the
oxygen source, the nitrogen can be added to the equation, although
it does not react, to show the composition of the flue gas:
- C_xH_y + \left( x+ \frac \right) O_2 + 3.76 \left( x+ \frac \right) N_2 \rightarrow \; xCO_2 + \left( \frac \right) H_2O + 3.76 \left( x + \frac \right) N_2
For example, the burning of propane is:
- C_3H_8 + 5O_2 + 18.8N_2 \rightarrow \; 3CO_2 + 4H_2O + 18.8N_2
The simple word equation for the combustion of a
hydrocarbon in air is:
- \textrm + \textrm \rightarrow \; \textrm + \textrm + \textrm + \textrm
Nitrogen may also oxidize when there is an excess
of oxygen. The reaction is thermodynamically favored only at high
temperatures. Diesel
engines are run with an excess of oxygen to combust small
particles that tend to form with only a stoichiometric amount of
oxygen, necessarily producing nitrogen oxide emissions. Both the
United States and European Union are planning to impose limits to
nitrogen oxide emissions, which necessitate the use of a special
catalytic
converter or treatment of the exhaust with urea.
Fuels
Liquid fuels
Combustion of a liquid fuel in an oxidizing
atmosphere actually happens in the gas phase. It is the vapour that
burns, not the liquid. Therefore, a liquid will normally catch fire
only above a certain temperature: its flash point.
The flash point of a liquid fuel is the lowest temperature at which
it can form an ignitable mix with air. It is also the minimum
temperature at which there is enough evaporated fuel in the air to
start combustion.
Solid fuels
The act of combustion consists of three
relatively distinct but overlapping phases:
- Preheating phase, when the unburned fuel is heated up to its flash point and then fire point. Flammable gases start being evolved in a process similar to dry distillation.
- Distillation phase or gaseous phase, when the mix of evolved flammable gases with oxygen is ignited. Energy is produced in the form of heat and light. Flames are often visible. Heat transfer from the combustion to the solid maintains the evolution of flammable vapours.
- Charcoal phase or solid phase, when the output of flammable gases from the material is too low for persistent presence of flame and the charred fuel does not burn rapidly anymore but just glows and later only smoulders.
Reaction mechanism
Combustion in oxygen is a radical chain reaction where many distinct radical intermediates participate.The high energy required for initiation is
explained by the unusual structure of the dioxygen molecule. The
lowest-energy configuration of the dioxygen molecule is a stable,
relatively unreactive diradical in a triplet spin
state. Bonding can be described with three bonding electron
pairs and two antibonding electrons, whose spins are
aligned, such that the molecule has nonzero total angular momentum.
Most fuels, on the other hand, are in a singlet state, with paired
spins and zero total angular momentum. Interaction between the two
is quantum mechanically a "forbidden
transition", i.e. possible with a very low probability. To
initiate combustion, energy is required to force dioxygen into a
spin-paired state, or singlet
oxygen. This intermediate is extremely reactive. The energy is
supplied as heat. The reaction produces heat, which keeps it
going.
Combustion of hydrocarbons is thought to be
initiated by the abstraction of a hydride radical (H) from the fuel
to oxygen, to give a hydroperoxide radical (HOO). This reacts
further to give hydroperoxides, which break up to give hydroxyl radicals. There are a
great variety of these processes that produce fuel radicals and
oxidizing radicals. Oxidizing species include singlet oxygen,
hydroperoxide, hydroxyl, monatomic oxygen, and hydroperoxyl (OH2).
Such intermediates are short-lived and cannot be isolated. However,
non-radical intermediates are stable and are produced in incomplete
combustion. An example is acetaldehyde produced in
the combustion of ethanol. An intermediate in the
combustion of carbon and hydrocarbons, carbon
monoxide, is of special importance because it is a poisonous gas.
Solid fuels also undergo a great number of
pyrolysis reactions
that give more easily oxidized, gaseous fuels. These reactions are
endothermic and require constant energy input from the combustion
reactions. A lack of oxygen or other poorly designed conditions
result in these noxious and carcinogenic pyrolysis products being
emitted as thick, black smoke.
Temperature
Assuming perfect combustion conditions, such as complete combustion under adiabatic conditions (i.e., no heat loss or gain), the adiabatic combustion temperature can be determined. The formula that yields this temperature is based on the first law of thermodynamics and takes note of the fact that the heat of combustion is used entirely for heating the fuel, the combustion air or oxygen, and the combustion product gases (commonly referred to as the flue gas).In the case of fossil fuels burnt in air, the
combustion temperature depends on all of the following:
- the heating value;
- the stoichiometric air to fuel ratio ;
- the specific heat capacity of fuel and air;
- the air and fuel inlet temperatures.
The adiabatic combustion temperature (also known
as the
adiabatic flame temperature) increases for higher heating
values and inlet air and fuel temperatures and for stoichiometric
air ratios approaching one.
Most commonly, the adiabatic combustion
temperatures for coals are around 2200 °C (for inlet air and fuel
at ambient temperatures and for \lambda = 1.0), around 2150 °C for
oil and 2000 °C for natural gas.
In industrial fired heaters, power plant
steam generators, and large gas-fired
turbines, the more common way of expressing the usage of more
than the stoichiometric combustion air is percent excess
combustion air. For example, excess combustion air of 15
percent means that 15 percent more than the required stoichiometric
air is being used.
Instabilities
Combustion instabilities are typically violent
pressure oscillations in a combustion chamber. These pressure
oscillations can be as high as 180dB, and long term exposure to
these cyclic pressure and thermal loads reduces the life of engine
components. In rockets, such as the F1 used in the Saturn V
program, instabilities led to massive damage of the combustion
chamber and surrounding components. This problem was solved by
re-designing the fuel injector. In liquid jet engines the droplet
size and distribution can be used to attenuate the instabilities.
Combustion instabilities are a major concern in ground-based gas
turbine engines because of NOx emissions. The tendency is to run
lean, an equivalence ratio less than 1, to reduce the combustion
temperature and thus reduce the NOx emissions; however, running the
combustion lean makes it very susceptible to combustion
instabilities.
The Rayleigh
Criterion is the basis for analysis of thermoacoustic
combustion instabilities and is evaluated using the Rayleigh Index
over one cycle of instability.
- G(x)=\frac\int_q'(x,t)p'(x,t)dt
When the heat release oscillations are in phase
with the pressure oscillations the Rayleigh Index is positive and
the magnitude of the thermo acoustic instability increases.
Consecutively if the Rayleigh Index is negative then thermoacoustic
damping occurs. The Rayleigh Criterion implies that a
thermoacoustic instability can be optimally controlled by having
heat release oscillations 180 degrees out of phase with pressure
oscillations at the same frequency. This minimizes the Rayleigh
Index.
See also
Related concepts
- Air-fuel ratio
- Deflagration
- Detonation
- Fire
- Flue gas emissions from fossil fuel combustion
- Flue gas stacks
- Gas stoichiometry
- Heat of combustion
- Phlogiston theory (historical)
- Pyrolysis
- Pyrophoric
- Smouldering
- Spontaneous combustion
- Stoichiometry
- Chemical looping combustion
Machines and equipment
Measurement techniques
Social applications and issues
External links
- Hydrocarbon combustion Simple applet that illustrates the Chemical equation.
- Fuel efficiency (stoichiometric air fuel mixture) vs. decreased emissions in combustion engines
- Explaining burning using the candle.
- Fuel efficiency (stoichiometric air fuel mixture) vs. decreased emissions in combustion engines
- Simulation of gas combustion
combustion in Arabic: احتراق
combustion in Catalan: Combustió
combustion in Czech: Hoření
combustion in Danish: Forbrænding
combustion in German: Verbrennung (Chemie)
combustion in Modern Greek (1453-): Καύση
combustion in Spanish: Combustión
combustion in French: Combustion
combustion in Galician: Combustión
combustion in Korean: 연소
combustion in Indonesian: Pembakaran
combustion in Italian: Combustione
combustion in Hebrew: בעירה
combustion in Lithuanian: Degimo reakcija
combustion in Dutch: Verbranding
combustion in Japanese: 燃焼
combustion in Norwegian: Forbrenning
combustion in Polish: Spalanie
combustion in Portuguese: Combustão
combustion in Russian: Горение
combustion in Finnish: Palaminen
combustion in Swedish: Förbränning
combustion in Tagalog: Kombustyon
combustion in Ukrainian: Горіння
combustion in Chinese: 燃烧
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
backfire, balefire, beacon, beacon fire, blaze, blazing, blistering, bonfire, branding, burning, burning ghat, calcination, campfire, carbonization, cauterization, cautery, cheerful fire, cineration, concremation, conflagration, corposant, cozy fire, cracking, crackling fire,
cremation, crematory, cupellation, death fire,
deflagration,
destructive distillation, distillation, distilling, fen fire,
fire, flame, flaming, flashing point,
flicker, flickering
flame, forest fire, fox fire, funeral pyre, ignis fatuus, ignition, incineration, ingle, lambent flame, marshfire, open fire, oxidation, oxidization, parching, prairie fire,
pyre, pyrolysis, raging fire,
refining, scorching, scorification, sea of
flames, searing,
self-immolation, sheet of fire, signal beacon, singeing, smelting, smudge fire, suttee, the stake, thermogenesis, three-alarm
fire, two-alarm fire, vesication, watch fire,
wildfire, witch
fire