bigfooted said:
We assume that volume fractions and mole fractions are the same. That means that for every mole of ch4, you have 2*0.21=0.42 moles of oxygen.
Okay so I think I see what the crux of my understanding.
There seem to be different ways to represent equivalence ratio, it seems like one way is a definition of Fuel to Oxidizer (the oxidizer part in air is oxygen, so out of the total volumetric flow of air, I have to extract the oxygen part of it to use in the equivalence ratio)
$$ \phi = \frac{(F/O)}{(F/O\vert_{\text{stoich}})} \hspace{1in} \phi = \frac{(O/F\vert_{\text{stoich}})}{(O/F)}$$
So I've gathered there's one way to represent the stoichiometric fuel to oxidizer ratio on a molecular basis ## \frac{CH_4}{O_2}\vert_{\text{stoich}} = \frac{1}{2}##.
I'd like to to convert this stoichiometric ratio from a molecular basis to a volume basis, I might be able to with the following (
at STP). Assuming 1LPM of CH4 and 2LPM of O2 (not air) is correct volumetric flow rates for a stoichiometric combustion.
$$ 1[LPM]\vert_{CH_4} \times \frac{1[{\text{mol}}]}{22.4[L]} \approx 0.0446 \left[\frac{\text{mol}}{\text{min}}\right]\vert_{CH_4} \hspace{1in} 2[LPM]\vert_{O_2} \times \frac{1[{\text{mol}}]}{22.4[L]} \approx 0.0893\left[\frac{\text{mol}}{\text{min}}\right]\vert_{O_2}$$
Since I'd be using air, I'm more interested in the volumetric flow of air that corresponds to 2LMP of Oxygen, so I can use the approximation of 21% O2 and 79% N2 in air to get the molar flow rate of air from 2LPM of Oxygen.
$$ \frac{100}{21} \times 0.0893\left[\frac{\text{mol}}{\text{min}}\right]\vert_{O_2} = 0.425 \left[\frac{\text{mol}}{\text{min}}\right]\vert_{AIR}$$
Now since I have both the methane and air in molar flow rates, I can reference
online ratios to check my math (remembering air-fuel and oxidizer-fuel ratios are different)
For methane:
$$ \frac{\text{Air}}{\text{Fuel}}\vert_{\text{molar}}^{\text{stoich}} = 9.52 \hspace{1in} \frac{0.425\left[\frac{\text{mol}}{\text{min}}\right]\vert_{AIR}}{0.0446 \left[\frac{\text{mol}}{\text{min}}\right]\vert_{CH_4}} \approx 9.53 $$
If what I've done is correct, then for my experiment I can determine what the volumetric flow rate of methane and air should be to correspond to some equivalence ratio I'd like to study.
$$ \phi = \frac{9.52}{\left[\frac{\text{mol}}{\text{min}}\right]\vert_{AIR}/ \left[\frac{\text{mol}}{\text{min}}\right]\vert_{CH_4}} $$