Mass-fraction of oxygen as a predictor of HHV of gaseous, liquid and solid fuels

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Merckel, Ryan David
Heydenrych, M.D. (Michael)

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

The higher heating value (HHV) of gaseous, liquid and solid fuels is demonstrated to be a strong function of the mass fraction of oxygen required for combustion, and suitable correlations are proposed to describe this relationship accurately. A 4th order correlation was found to be the best for estimating HHV as an all-purpose correlation with a root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 1.2 MJ/kg, coefficient of determination (R2) value of 0.9900 and mean bias error (MBE) of 0.40 %. A 3rd order correlation was as accurate with an RMSE of 1.2 MJ/kg, R2 value of 0.9898 and an MBE of – 0.16 %. In addition, the linear relationship between the HHV and oxygen required for combustion on a mole basis is demonstrated and an alternative mole-based correlation is proposed. A total of 311 HHV data from various sources are used to validate these correlations and 13 other correlations available in the literature are used for further comparison.

Description

Keywords

Higher heating value, Universal correlation, Fuel combustion

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Merckel, R.D. & Heydenrych, M.D. 2017, 'Mass-fraction of oxygen as a predictor of HHV of gaseous, liquid and solid fuels', Energy Procedia, vol. 142, pp. 4124-4130.