The aim of the present work is to quantitatively measure the hydroxyl radical concentration by using LIF(laserinduced fluorescence) in flame.The detailed physical models of spectral absorption lineshape broadening,col...The aim of the present work is to quantitatively measure the hydroxyl radical concentration by using LIF(laserinduced fluorescence) in flame.The detailed physical models of spectral absorption lineshape broadening,collisional transition and quenching at elevated pressure are built.The fine energy level structure of the OH molecule is illustrated to understand the process with laser-induced fluorescence emission and others in the case without radiation,which include collisional quenching,rotational energy transfer(RET),and vibrational energy transfer(VET).Based on these,some numerical results are achieved by simulations in order to evaluate the fluorescence yield at elevated pressure.These results are useful for understanding the real physical processes in OH-LIF technique and finding a way to calibrate the signal for quantitative measurement of OH concentration in a practical combustor.展开更多
基金Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Grant No.11272338)the Fund from the Science and Technology on Scramjet Key Laboratory,China(Grant No.STSKFKT2013004)
文摘The aim of the present work is to quantitatively measure the hydroxyl radical concentration by using LIF(laserinduced fluorescence) in flame.The detailed physical models of spectral absorption lineshape broadening,collisional transition and quenching at elevated pressure are built.The fine energy level structure of the OH molecule is illustrated to understand the process with laser-induced fluorescence emission and others in the case without radiation,which include collisional quenching,rotational energy transfer(RET),and vibrational energy transfer(VET).Based on these,some numerical results are achieved by simulations in order to evaluate the fluorescence yield at elevated pressure.These results are useful for understanding the real physical processes in OH-LIF technique and finding a way to calibrate the signal for quantitative measurement of OH concentration in a practical combustor.