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Laser-Diagnostic Platform for Multi-Parameter Hypersonics Measurements

Kearney, Sean P.; Retter, Jonathan E.; Richardson, Daniel; Koll, Matthew

We have investigated the utility of femtosecond/picosecond (fs/ps) coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering(CARS)for simultaneous measurement of temperature, pressure, and velocity in hypersonic flows. Experiments were conducted in underexpanded jets of air and molecular nitrogen to assess CARS diagnostic performance in terms of signal level scaling, measurement precision, and dynamic range. Pure-rotational CARS of the Raman S branch was applied for simultaneous measurement of temperature and pressure. Thermometry was performed by fitting CARS spectra acquired under nearly collision-free conditions by introducing a picosecond CARS probe pulse at zero delay from the femtosecond pump. Pressure could be subsequently obtained by from a second CARS spectral acquisition with a picosecond probe introduced at time delay to sample molecular collisions. CARS velocimetry was attempted by monitoring the Doppler shift of the N2 vibrational, Q-branch spectrum, with both direct spectral resolution and optical heterodyne detection schemes. Doppler shifts from the sub-I-km/s air jet flow proved too small to measure with this approach, prompting us to turn to femtosecond laser electronic excitation tagging (FLEET) for reliable single-laser-shot velocimetry and CARS temperature/pressure measurement. Scaling of the CARS signal level to very low pressure and temperature conditions expected in the Sandia hypersonic wind tunnel (HWI) was performed. CARS measurements of temperature in HWT appear to be very feasible, while prospects for HWT pressure measurements are reasonable.

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Single-camera, single-shot, time-resolved laser-induced incandescence decay imaging

Optics Letters

Mazumdar, Yi C.; Cenker, Emre; Richardson, Daniel; Kearney, Sean P.; Halls, Benjamin R.; Skeen, Scott A.; Shaddix, Christopher R.; Guildenbecher, Daniel

Knowledge of soot particle sizes is important for understanding soot formation and heat transfer in combustion environments. Soot primary particle sizes can be estimated by measuring the decay of time-resolved laser-induced incandescence (TiRe-LII) signals. Existing methods for making planar TiRe-LII measurements require either multiple cameras or time-gate sweeping with multiple laser pulses, making these techniques difficult to apply in turbulent or unsteady combustion environments. Here, we report a technique for planar soot particle sizing using a single high-sensitivity, ultra-high-speed 10 MHz camera with a 50 ns gate and no intensifier. With this method, we demonstrate measurements of background flame luminosity, prompt LII, and TiRe-LII decay signals for particle sizing in a single laser shot. The particle sizing technique is first validated in a laminar non-premixed ethylene flame. Then, the method is applied to measurements in a turbulent ethylene jet flame.

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Two-beam femtosecond rotational CARS for one-dimensional thermometry in a turbulent, sooting jet flame

AIAA SciTech Forum - 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Richardson, Daniel R.; Roy, Sukesh; Gord, James R.; Kearney, Sean P.

Single-laser-shot femtosecond rotational coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (fs-RCARS) temperature measurements are performed across a 3- mm line in a turbulent, sooting ethylene jet flame to characterize temperature gradients. A 60-fs pulse is used to excite many rotational Raman transitions, and a 160-ps pulse is used to probe the Raman coherence. The spatial resolution of the measurements is 670 μm in the direction of beam propagation, 200 μm in the direction along the 1D line, and 50 μm in the transverse direction. Measurements have been performed at multiple locations in the jet flame, and the measured temperature are similar to previously recorded point measurements.

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Two-beam femtosecond rotational CARS for one-dimensional thermometry in a turbulent, sooting jet flame

AIAA SciTech Forum - 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Richardson, Daniel; Roy, Sukesh; Gord, James; Kearney, Sean P.

Single-laser-shot femtosecond rotational coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (fs-RCARS) temperature measurements are performed across a 3- mm line in a turbulent, sooting ethylene jet flame to characterize temperature gradients. A 60-fs pulse is used to excite many rotational Raman transitions, and a 160-ps pulse is used to probe the Raman coherence. The spatial resolution of the measurements is 670 μm in the direction of beam propagation, 200 μm in the direction along the 1D line, and 50 μm in the transverse direction. Measurements have been performed at multiple locations in the jet flame, and the measured temperature are similar to previously recorded point measurements.

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Laser-diagnostic mapping of temperature and soot statistics in a 2-m diameter turbulent pool fire

Combustion and Flame

Kearney, Sean P.; Grasser, Thomas

We present spatial profiles of temperature and soot-volume-fraction statistics from a sooting, 2-m base diameter turbulent pool fire, burning a 10%-toluene/90%-methanol fuel mixture. Dual-pump coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering and laser-induced incandescence are utilized for simultaneous point measurements of temperature and soot. The research fuel-blend used here results in a lower soot loading than real transportation fuels, but allows us to apply high-fidelity laser diagnostics for spatially resolved measurements in a fully turbulent, buoyant fire of meter-scale base size. Profiles of mean and rms fluctuations are radially resolved across the fire plume, both within the hydrocarbon-rich vapor-dome region near fuel pool, and higher within the actively burning region of the fire. The spatial evolution of the soot and temperature probability density functions is discussed. Soot fluctuations display significant intermittency across the full extent of the fire plume for the research fuel blend used. Simultaneous, spatially overlapped temperature/soot measurements permit us to obtain estimates of joint statistics that are presented as spatially resolved conditional averages across the fire plume, and in terms of a joint pdf obtained by including measurements from multiple spatial locations. Within the actively burning region of the fire, soot is observed to occupy a limited temperature range between ∼1000 and 2000 K, with peak soot concentration occurring at 1600–1700 K across the full radial extent of the fire plume, despite marked changes in the local temperature pdf across the same spatial extent. A wider range of soot temperatures is observed in the fuel vapor-dome region low in the pool fire, with detectable cold soot persisting into conditionally averaged statistics. The results yield insight into soot temperature across a wide spatial extent of a fully turbulent pool fire of meaningful size, which are valuable for development of soot radiative-emission models and for validation of fire fluid-dynamics codes.

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Temperature and oxygen measurements in a metallized propellant flame by hybrid fs/ps rotational coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering

Optics InfoBase Conference Papers

Kearney, Sean P.; Guildenbecher, Daniel

Ultrafast pure-rotational CARS is applied to an aluminized ammonium-perchlorate propellant flame. Background-free spectra were acquired in this challenging high-temperature, particle-laden environment and successfully fit for temperature and oxygen/nitrogen ratio using a simple theoretical model.

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Temperature measurements in metalized propellant combustion using hybrid fs/ps coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering

Applied Optics

Kearney, Sean P.; Guildenbecher, Daniel

We apply ultrafast pure-rotational coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) for temperature and relative oxygen concentration measurements in the plume emanating from a burning, aluminized ammonium-perchlorate propellant strand. Combustion of these metal-based propellants is a particularly hostile environment for laserbased diagnostics, with intense background luminosity and scattering from hot metal particles as large as several hundred micrometers in diameter. CARS spectra that were previously obtained using nanosecond pulsed lasers in an aluminum-particle-seeded flame are examined and are determined to be severely impacted by nonresonant background, presumably as a result of the plasma formed by particulate-enhanced laser-induced breakdown. Introduction of femtosecond/picosecond (fs/ps) laser pulses improves CARS detection by providing time-gated elimination of strong nonresonant background interference. Single-laser-shot fs/ps CARS spectra were acquired from the burning propellant plume, with picosecond probe-pulse delays of 0 and 16 ps from the femtosecond pump and Stokes pulses. At zero delay, nonresonant background overwhelms the Raman-resonant spectroscopic features. Time-delayed probing results in the acquisition of background-free spectra that were successfully fit for temperature and relative oxygen content. Temperature probability densities and temperature/oxygen correlations were constructed from ensembles of several thousand single-laser-shot measurements with the CARS measurement volume positioned within 3 mm or less of the burning propellant surface. The results show that ultrafast CARS is a potentially enabling technology for probing harsh, particle-laden flame environments.

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Hybrid fs/ps CARS for sooting and particle-laden flames

54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Hoffmeister, K.N.G.; Guildenbecher, Daniel; Kearney, Sean P.

We report the application of ultrafast rotational coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) for temperature and relative oxygen concentration measurements in the plume emanating from a burning aluminized ammonium perchlorate propellant strand. Combustion of these metal-based propellants is a particularly hostile environment for laserbased diagnostics, with intense background luminosity, scattering and beam obstruction from hot metal particles that can be as large as several hundred microns in diameter. CARS spectra that were previously obtained using nanosecond pulsed lasers in an aluminumparticle- seeded flame are examined and are determined to be severely impacted by nonresonant background, presumably as a result of the plasma formed by particulateenhanced laser-induced breakdown. Introduction of fs/ps laser pulses enables CARS detection at reduced pulse energies, decreasing the likelihood of breakdown, while simultaneously providing time-gated elimination of any nonresonant background interference. Temperature probability densities and temperature/oxygen correlations were constructed from ensembles of several thousand single-laser-shot measurements from the fs/ps rotational CARS measurement volume positioned within 3 mm or less of the burning propellant surface. Preliminary results in canonical flames are presented using a hybrid fs/ps vibrational CARS system to demonstrate our progress towards acquiring vibrational CARS measurements for more accurate temperatures in the very high temperature propellant burns.

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Hybrid fs/ps CARS for sooting and particle-laden flames

54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Hoffmeister, K.N.G.; Guildenbecher, Daniel; Kearney, Sean P.

We report the application of ultrafast rotational coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) for temperature and relative oxygen concentration measurements in the plume emanating from a burning aluminized ammonium perchlorate propellant strand. Combustion of these metal-based propellants is a particularly hostile environment for laserbased diagnostics, with intense background luminosity, scattering and beam obstruction from hot metal particles that can be as large as several hundred microns in diameter. CARS spectra that were previously obtained using nanosecond pulsed lasers in an aluminumparticle- seeded flame are examined and are determined to be severely impacted by nonresonant background, presumably as a result of the plasma formed by particulateenhanced laser-induced breakdown. Introduction of fs/ps laser pulses enables CARS detection at reduced pulse energies, decreasing the likelihood of breakdown, while simultaneously providing time-gated elimination of any nonresonant background interference. Temperature probability densities and temperature/oxygen correlations were constructed from ensembles of several thousand single-laser-shot measurements from the fs/ps rotational CARS measurement volume positioned within 3 mm or less of the burning propellant surface. Preliminary results in canonical flames are presented using a hybrid fs/ps vibrational CARS system to demonstrate our progress towards acquiring vibrational CARS measurements for more accurate temperatures in the very high temperature propellant burns.

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Hybrid fs/ps rotational CARS temperature and oxygen measurements and soot LII measurements in a turbulent C2H4-fueled jet flame

54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Kearney, Sean P.; Hoffmeister, K.N.G.; Guildenbecher, Daniel; Winters, C.; Grasser, Thomas; Hewson, John C.

We present a detailed set of measurements from a piloted, sooting, turbulent C2H4-fueled jet flame. Hybrid femtosecond/picosecond coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) is used to monitor temperature and oxygen, while laser-induced incandescence (LII) is applied for imaging of the soot volume fraction in the challenging jet-flame environment at Reynolds number, Re = 20,000. A new dual-detection channel CARS instrument provides the enhanced dynamic range required in this highly intermittent and turbulent environment. LII measurements are made across a wide field of view requiring us to account for spatial variation in the soot-volume-fraction response of the instrument. Single-laser-shot results are used to illustrate the mean and rms statistics, as well as probability densities of all three measured quantities. LII data from the soot-growth region of the jet are used to benchmark the soot source term for one-dimensional turbulence (ODT) modeling of this turbulent flame. The ODT code is then used to predict temperature, oxygen and soot fluctuations within the soot oxidation region higher in the flame.

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Flash X-ray measurements on the shock-induced dispersal of a dense particle curtain

Experiments in Fluids

Wagner, Justin L.; Kearney, Sean P.; Beresh, Steven J.; Demauro, Edward P.; Pruett, Brian

The interaction of a Mach 1.67 shock wave with a dense particle curtain is quantified using flash radiography. These new data provide a view of particle transport inside a compressible, dense gas–solid flow of high optical opacity. The curtain, composed of 115-µm glass spheres, initially spans 87 % of the test section width and has a streamwise thickness of about 2 mm. Radiograph intensities are converted to particle volume fraction distributions using the Beer–Lambert law. The mass in the particle curtain, as determined from the X-ray data, is in reasonable agreement with that given from a simpler method using a load cell and particle imaging. Following shock impingement, the curtain propagates downstream and the peak volume fraction decreases from about 23 to about 4 % over a time of 340 µs. The propagation occurs asymmetrically, with the downstream side of the particle curtain experiencing a greater volume fraction gradient than the upstream side, attributable to the dependence of particle drag on volume fraction. Bulk particle transport is quantified from the time-dependent center of mass of the curtain. The bulk acceleration of the curtain is shown to be greater than that predicted for a single 115-µm particle in a Mach 1.67 shock-induced flow.

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Temperature, Oxygen, and Soot-Volume-Fraction Measurements in a Turbulent C2H4-Fueled Jet Flame

Kearney, Sean P.; Guildenbecher, Daniel; Winters, C.; Grasser, Thomas; Farias, Paul; Hewson, John C.

We present a detailed set of measurements from a piloted, sooting, turbulent C 2 H 4 - fueled diffusion flame. Hybrid femtosecond/picosecond coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) is used to monitor temperature and oxygen, while laser-induced incandescence (LII) is applied for imaging of the soot volume fraction in the challenging jet-flame environment at Reynolds number, Re = 20,000. Single-laser shot results are used to map the mean and rms statistics, as well as probability densities. LII data from the soot-growth region of the flame are used to benchmark the soot source term for one-dimensional turbulence (ODT) modeling of this turbulent flame. The ODT code is then used to predict temperature and oxygen fluctuations higher in the soot oxidation region higher in the flame.

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Gas temperature and concentration measurements in the vicinity of a burning/decomposing carbon-epoxy aircraft composite material

Fire and Materials 2015 - 14th International Conference and Exhibition, Proceedings

Kearney, Sean P.; Dodd, Amanda B.; Bohlin, Alexis; Kliewer, Christopher

We report measurements of temperature and O2/N2 mole-fraction ratio in the vicinity of a burning and decomposing carbon-epoxy composite aircraft material samples exposed to uniform heat fluxes of 48 and 69 kW/m2. Controlled laboratory experiments were conducted with the samples suspended above a cone-type heater and enclosed in an optically accessible chimney. Noninvasive coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) measurements we performed on a single-laser-shot basis. The CARS data were performed with both a traditional point measurement system and with a one-dimensional line imaging scheme that provides single-shot temperature and O2/N2 profiles to reveal the quantitative structure of the temperature and oxygen concentration profiles over the duration of the 30-40 minute duration events. The measured near-surface temperature and oxygen transport are an important factor for exothermic chemistry and oxidation of char materials and the carbon fibers themselves in a fire scenario. These unique laser-diagnostic experiments provide new information on physical/chemical processes in a well-controlled environment which may be useful for the development of heat-and mass-transfer models for the composite fire scenario.

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Pulse-burst PIV in a high-speed wind tunnel

53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Beresh, Steven J.; Kearney, Sean P.; Wagner, Justin L.; Guildenbecher, Daniel; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell; Pruett, Brian; Jiang, Naibo; Slipchenko, Mikhail N.; Mance, Jason; Roy, Sukesh

Time-resolved particle image velocimetry (TR-PIV) has been achieved in a high-speed wind tunnel, providing velocity field movies of compressible turbulence events. The requirements of high-speed flows demand greater energy at faster pulse rates than possible with the TR-PIV systems developed for low-speed flows. This has been realized using a pulse-burst laser to obtain movies at up to 50 kHz with higher speeds possible at the cost of spatial resolution. The constraints imposed by use of a pulse-burst laser are a limited burst duration of 10.2 ms and a low duty cycle for data acquisition. Pulse-burst PIV has been demonstrated in a supersonic jet exhausting into a transonic crossflow and in transonic flow over a rectangular cavity. The velocity field sequences reveal the passage of turbulent structures and can be used to find velocity power spectra at every point in the field, providing spatial distributions of acoustic modes. The present work represents the first use of TR-PIV in a high-speed ground test facility.

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Results 51–100 of 158
Results 51–100 of 158