JOURNAL ARTICLE

Laser-induced incandescence for soot particle size measurements in premixed flat flames

Boman AxelssonR.E. CollinPer-Erik Bengtsson

Year: 2000 Journal:   Applied Optics Vol: 39 (21)Pages: 3683-3683   Publisher: Optica Publishing Group

Abstract

Measurements of soot properties by means of laser-induced incandescence (LII) and combined scattering-extinction were performed in well-characterized premixed ethylene-air flames. In particular, the possibility of using LII as a tool for quantitative particle sizing was investigated. Particle sizes were evaluated from the temporal decay of the LII signal combined with heat balance modeling of laser-heated particles, and these sizes were compared with the particle sizes deduced from scattering-extinction measurements based on isotropic sphere theory. The correspondence was good early in the soot-formation process but less good at later stages, possibly because aggregation to clusters began to occur. A critical analysis has been made of how uncertainties in different parameters, both experimental and in the model, affect the evaluated particle sizes for LII. A sensitivity analysis of the LII model identified the ambient-flame temperature as a major source of uncertainty in the evaluated particle size, a conclusion that was supported by an analysis based on temporal LII profiles.

Keywords:
Incandescence Soot Materials science Extinction (optical mineralogy) Particle (ecology) Optics Particle size Scattering Laser Mie scattering Light scattering Diffusion flame Molecular physics Analytical Chemistry (journal) Combustion Chemistry Physics Chromatography

Metrics

122
Cited By
2.02
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
40
Refs
0.85
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Atmospheric Science
Combustion and flame dynamics
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Computational Mechanics
Advanced Combustion Engine Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Chemical Engineering →  Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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