Phosphor thermometry on a rotating flame holder for combustion applications
Author(s) -
Pradip Xavier,
Laurent Selle,
G. Öztarlik,
Thierry Poinsot
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
experiments in fluids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.01
H-Index - 122
eISSN - 1432-1114
pISSN - 0723-4864
DOI - 10.1007/s00348-018-2491-6
Subject(s) - emissivity , combustion , materials science , distortion (music) , temperature measurement , mechanics , adiabatic flame temperature , phosphor , optics , range (aeronautics) , transient (computer programming) , displacement (psychology) , coating , signal (programming language) , thermocouple , computational physics , chemistry , optoelectronics , thermodynamics , physics , composite material , combustor , computer science , psychology , amplifier , organic chemistry , cmos , psychotherapist , operating system , programming language
This study presents a method to measure wall temperatures of a rotating flame holder, which could be used as a combustion control device. Laser-induced phosphorescence is found to be a reliable technique to gather such experimental data. The paper first investigates how the coating (thickness, emissivity and lifetime) influence the flame stabilization. While the low thermal conductivity of the coating is estimated to induce a temperature difference of only 0.08–0.4 K, the emissivity increases by 40\(\%\). Nevertheless, the transient and steady-state flame locations are not affected. Second, because temperature measurements on the rotating cylinder are likely to fail due the long phosphor lifetimes, we modify the classical point-wise arrangement. We propose to illuminate a larger area, and to correct the signal with a distortion function that accounts for the displacement of the target. An analytical distortion function is derived and compared to measured ones. It shows that the range of measurements is limited by the signal extinction and the rapid distortion function decay. A diagram summarizes the range of operating conditions where measurements are valid. Finally, these experimental data are used to validate direct numerical simulations. Cylinder temperature variations within the precision of these measurements are shown not to influence the flame location, but larger deviations highlight different trends for the two asymmetric flame branches.
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