Abstract
To understand the effect of n-heptane (NC7H16) addition on the auto-ignition of methane (CH4) at low to intermediate temperatures, the ignition delay times (IDTs) of stoichiometric CH4/NC7H16 blends with varying NC7H16 concentrations were measured at temperatures from 600 to 1000 K, pressures of 20 and 40 bar. Detailed chemical kinetic mechanisms were validated against the newly measured IDTs. Adding NC7H16 in the binary mixture shows a nonlinear promoting effect on the IDTs: micro-addition of NC7H16 can significantly reduce the IDTs of the binary mixture when the NC7H16 is lower than 20%. However, the decrease of the IDTs becomes much slower when further increasing the NC7H16 addition. Affected by the negative temperature coefficient (NTC) behavior of NC7H16, this nonlinear effect is particularly notable at around 795 K, the low boundary of the NTC region. To reveal the nonlinear reactivity-promoting effect of NC7H16 addition on the binary mixture, reaction flux, ignition sensitivity, rate of production of the key radicals along heat production analyses were conducted. Apart from contributing more H production through the low-temperature chain-branching reaction pathways of NC7H16, adding NC7H16 also promotes the pre-ignition heat release of the binary mixture. The heat release raises the system temperature and further promotes the mixture ignition, enhancing the nonlinear effect at low temperatures.