CO2 and H2O are important combustion products of hydrocarbon fuels. This paper uses wavelength modulation spectroscopy (WMS) to simultaneously measure the pressure, temperature and CO2 component concentration information. Two absorption lines near 2.7um were selected, and the measurement experiment was carried out on the high-temperature furnace. The results showed that the measurement error of the three parameters was within 6% under the conditions of less than 1atm, 300-1200K temperature range and 10% concentration range, which verified the feasibility and accuracy of the method.
Tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy can achieve simultaneous measurements of gas temperature, concentrations, and pressure of the combustion field. The wavelength modulated spectroscopy method can improve the signal-to-noise ratio of measurements in the harsh engine flow environment, but the signal demodulation time is long. After the experiment, a database of the integrated absorption area and 2f/1f maximum of the two spectral lines per unit length is established via the same absorption spectral, scan frequency and modulation frequency are used to traverse the temperature T, concentration χ and pressure P. For the subsequent the fast measurement of the combustion field parameters is achieved by comparing the experimental measurements with the database values at the same experiment. The results show that the database method requires 2.2h to process 1.5GB of experimental data with three channels and 4.6s measurement time, which is up to 7 times shorter than the traditional demodulation method.
CO is an important process product of hydrocarbon fuel combustion, and its concentration can represent the combustion reaction process of hydrocarbon fuel in scramjet combustion chamber, which always generate the flow field with high pressure and temperature. In this paper, CO concentration measurement under high pressure was studied. The absorption line near 2.3um was selected and the detection limit of CO concentration was improved by cavity enhanced absorption spectroscopy. A resonator for high pressure measurement was designed and developed, based on which, the CO concentration measurement experiments under different pressures were carried out, and the linear relationship between the absorption line width and the pressure was verified. The lower detection limit of CO concentration of the measurement system was 34ppm at 100kPa, and 225ppm at 500kPa.
Tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy (TDLAS) has been an effective technology to measure the velocity of the combustion flow in hypersonic engine. The measurement theory is based on the relative Doppler shifts of the absorption transition for the upstream and downstream beams in the flow. The resolution of the TDLAS system for velocity measurement, which is defined as the minimum velocity change value that the TDLAS system can identify, is analyzed in three aspects: the structure of the beam path, the absorption transition from the laser, and the quantization of the digital signal sampling. The measured accuracy of velocity is also investigated based on the study of the resolution. An experiment was executed on a scramjet engine with a TDLAS system to validate the resolution and the accuracy of the measured velocity.
Tomographic absorption spectroscopy (TAS) is a promising combustion diagnosis technique. It can simultaneously provide 2D temperature and concentration of the flow field. Some engine combustors, such as scramjet combustors and internal-combustion engines, only allow limited optical access. Only a few beams (ca. 20-40) are available to measure the combustor and beam layout becomes a key factor affecting TAS accuracy. In engineering application, probes are embedded in the wall of the combustor for laser propagation. The probe size should be taken into account when designing beam layout. In this paper, we considered the probe locations into beam optimization. The math formulation of the problem and the solving algorithm (genetic simulated annealing algorithm) is developed.
Two-dimensional imaging of gas temperature and concentration is realized by hyperspectral tomography, which has the characteristics of using multi-wavelengths absorption spectral information, so that the imaging could be accomplished in a small number of projections and viewing angles. A temperature and concentration model is established to simulate the combustion conditions and a total number of 10 near-infrared absorption spectral information of H2O is used. An improved simulated annealing algorithm by adjusting search step is performed the main search algorithm for the tomography. By adding random errors into the absorption area information, the stability of the algorithm is tested, and the results are compared with the reconstructions provided by algebraic reconstruction technique which takes advantage of 2 spectral information contents in imaging. The results show that the two methods perform equivalent in low-level noise environment, but at high-level, hyperspectral tomography turns out to be more stable.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.