The Mild Combustion is characterized by both an elevated temperature of reactants and low temperature increase in the combustion process. These features are the results of several technological demands coming from different application fields. This review paper aims to collect information which could be useful in understanding the fundamentals and applications of Mild Combustion. The information in this field are still sparse, because of the recent identification of the process, so that many speculative considerations have been presented in order to make the whole framework more consistent and rich with potential new applications. A rigorous definition of Mild Combustion is preliminarily given in order to fix the input variables of the process. Under these constraints the influence of the physical, thermodynamic and chemical variables on the most relevant outlet parameters are analyzed. The physical aspects taken into account are atomization, evaporation, mixing and radiative heat transfer. In particular, the evolution of the mixing layer for high temperature diluted oxidant is analyzed. It is shown that mass fluxes through the stoichiometric isosurfaces are lower than those in not diluted conditions and that the annihilation of these isosurfaces is enhanced in the Mild Combustion conditions. Both effects infer low rates of heat release according to the experimental results reported in the literature. The thermodynamic aspects are dealt through the comparative analysis of the minimum, maximum and equilibrium temperature profiles versus the mixture fraction in the whole allowable range for the diluted and not-diluted cases. The chemical aspects have been analyzed in relation to the chemical kinetics rates for different oxidative routes and the temporal evolution of the self-ignition process. The molecular oxygen addition, the hydroperoxide dissociation and atomic hydrogen oxidation are evaluated in wide pressure and temperature ranges. In such a way self-ignition regimes which rely on different preferential chemical kinetics routes are identified and comparison between diluted/not diluted conditions are performed for a fixed evolution time. In this case it is shown that Mild Combustion conditions extend the pressure–temperature range, in which the oxidation is depressed, at relatively low pressure, whereas the ‘ceiling temperature’ is shifted to lower temperature for Mild Combustion condition at higher pressure. The second part of the review shows the potentialities of the diluted high temperature air combustion in applications related both to efficiency and pollution of thermal generation as well as to abatement of the pollutants along the flue gas stream of a primary combustion system. Some selected examples in these fields as land-base gas-turbines, boiler combustion chamber and domestic heating systems are presented. In these, the emphasis, is put preliminarily on aspects related more to efficiency than to pollution reduction, even though this target is implicitly taken into consideration. Then environme...
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