Energetic Materials Frontiers (Mar 2022)

Development of an infrared laser absorption sensor for non-intrusive gas temperature measurements

  • Kun Duan,
  • Da-xin Wen,
  • Yu Wang,
  • Liu-hao Ma,
  • Kin-Pang Cheong,
  • Chao-kai Yuan,
  • Wei Ren

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 10 – 17

Abstract

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Energetic materials have extremely high volumetric and specific energy densities, making them attractive and important in combustion systems. To improve their combustion performance, reliable temperature acquirement method is highly demanded. A laser sensor was developed for in situ and quantitative measurements of gas temperature. Scanned-wavelength direct absorption spectroscopy was used for line-of-sight temperature measurements. Multiple H2O absorption features in the near-infrared combination band (v1+v3) and mid-infrared fundamental band (v3) were selected to establish four absorption line pairs with good temperature sensitivity. Three infrared distributed feedback lasers (DFB) were used to cover the selected absorption lines. The accuracy and uncertainty of the sensor were first numerically evaluated in a wide temperature range of 1000–3000 ​K under different Gaussian white noise levels (5–20%). A free-space optical setup was established to experimentally evaluate the sensor performance by measuring benchmark laminar premixed flames, which were compared with additional thermocouple measurements, chemical kinetic modeling and computational fluid dynamics simulations. The good performance of the current sensor indicates the potential of being used in non-intrusive, in-situ and quantitative diagnostics of the energetic materials combustion.

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