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Comparison of multiple diagnostic techniques to study soot formation and morphology in a diffusion flame.

Authors :
Kholghy, Mohammad Reza
Afarin, Yashar
Sediako, Anton D
Barba, Javier
Lapuerta, Magín
Chu, Carson
Weingarten, Jason
Borshanpour, Bobby
Chernov, Victor
Thomson, Murray J
Source :
Combustion & Flame. Feb2017, Vol. 176, p567-583. 17p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Different non-intrusive optical and intrusive non optical diagnostic methods are used to measure flame and soot properties in a laminar coflow diffusion flame in order to compare and analyze the sensitivity of each technique to soot particles with different age and morphology. Flame temperature is measured using rapid thermocouple insertion (RTI) method and also by measuring soot spectral emissions (SSE). Soot volume fraction ( f v ) is measured quantitatively with laser extinction (LE), time resolved laser induced incandescent (TiRe-LII) and SSE methods and qualitatively from the transmission electron microscope (TEM) images of the thermophoretically sampled soot particles. Particle internal/aggregate nanostructure, and primary particle diameter are also analyzed based on TEM images from the sampled particles and TiRe-LII. It is shown that the optical methods are only sensitive to mature soot particles with solid appearance and cannot detect either temperature or f v in regions where liquid like nascent soot particles are dominant. f v measured by LE and TiRe-LII agree well while the values measured by SSE are lower. This discrepancy is attributed to the high sensitivity of f v measured by SSE to the measured temperature values. Temperature profiles measured by SSE are considerably higher than the values measured by RTI. It is shown that not considering the change of the surface emissivity of the thermocouple junction due to particle deposition for estimating radiation loss in regions where nascent or mature soot particles are dominant contributes to this discrepancy. Primary particle sizes measured based on TEM images and TiRe-LII agree reasonably well. Soot aggregate fractal dimension is shown to decrease as the soot particles age and become more mature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00102180
Volume :
176
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Combustion & Flame
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
121050745
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.combustflame.2016.11.012