diffusionflammor
Diffusionflammor are flames in which the fuel and the oxidizer are introduced separately and mix and react predominantly by diffusion at the flame surface, rather than being premixed before ignition. They are common in hydrocarbon flames, such as candles, oil lamps, and many industrial jet flames, where the fuel leaves a source and entraining air supplies the oxidizer.
In a diffusion flame, the reaction zone forms at the interface where fuel molecules and oxidizer molecules
Key properties include the dependence on mixing rates and local equivalence ratio, which determine temperature distribution,
Diffusion flames are important for fundamental combustion research as simple models of mixing-controlled reactions. They also
See also: premixed flames, jet diffusion flames, soot formation, combustion modeling.