Publications by Year: 2005

Journal Article
Delhay, J, Y Bouvier, E Therssen, JD Black, and P Desgroux. 2005. 2D imaging of laser wing effects and of soot sublimation in laser-induced incandescence measurements. Appl. Phys. B 81: 181-186.
Yoder, GD, PK Diwakar, and DW Hahn. 2005. Assessment of soot particle vaporization effects during laser-induced incandescence with time-resolved light scattering. Appl. Opt. 20: 4211-4219.
Meyer, Terrence R, Sukesh Roy, Vincent M Belovich, Edwin Corporan, and JAmes R Gord. 2005. Simultaneous planar laser-induced incandescence, OH planar laser-induced fluorescence, and droplet Mie scattering in swirl-stabilized spray flames. Appl. Opt. 44: 445-454.
Witze, Peter O, Michael Gershenzon, and Hope A Michelsen. 2005. Dual-Laser LIDELS: An Optical Diagnostic for Time-Resolved Volatile Fraction Measurements of Diesel Particulate Emissions. WebsiteAbstract
Double-pulse laser-induced desorption with elastic laser scattering (LIDELS) is a diagnostic technique capable of making time-resolved, in situ measurements of the volatile fraction of diesel particulate matter (PM). The technique uses two laser pulses of comparable energy, separated in time by an interval sufficiently short to freeze the flow field, to measure the change in PM volume caused by laser-induced desorption of the volatile fraction. The first laser pulse of a pulse-pair produces elastic laser scattering (ELS) that gives the total PM volume, and also deposits the energy to desorb the volatiles. ELS from the second pulse gives the volume of the remaining solid portion of the PM, and the ratio of these two measurements is the quantitative solid volume fraction. In an earlier study, we used a single laser to make real-time LIDELS measurements during steady-state operation of a diesel engine. In this paper, we discuss the advantages and disadvantages of the two LIDELS techniques and present measurements made in real diesel exhaust and simulated diesel exhaust created by coating diffusion-flame soot with single-component hydrocarbons. Comparison with analysis of PM collected on quartz filters reveals that LIDELS considerably underpredicts the volatile fraction. We discuss reasons for this discrepancy and recommend future directions for LIDELS research.
Liu, Fengshan, Gregory J Smallwood, and David R Snelling. 2005. Effects of primary particle diameter and aggregate size distribution on the temperature of soot particles heated by pulsed lasers. Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer 93: 301-312. WebsiteAbstract
Temperature histories of nanosecond-pulsed laser-heated soot particles of different primary particle diameters and different aggregate sizes were calculated using an aggregate-based heat transfer model. Relatively low laser fluences were considered to ensure maximum particle temperatures were below about 3800 K to avoid soot particle sublimation. After the laser pulse, the temperature of soot particles in larger aggregates decreases more slowly than that of particles in smaller aggregates due to the increased shielding effect. For a given aggregate size, the temperature of particles of smaller diameter decays faster as a result of a larger surface area-to-volume ratio. The effective temperature of soot particles in the laser probe volume was calculated based on the ratio of thermal radiation intensities of soot particles at 400 and 780 nm to simulate the experimentally measured soot particle temperature using two-color optical pyrometry. The effect of aggregate size distribution of soot particles on the effective particle temperature was investigated under different initial temperatures.
Hadef, R, V Krüger, Klaus Peter Geigle, MS Tsurikov, Y Schneider-Kühnle, and M Aigner. 2005. Mesures de la taille et de la concentration de la suie dans une flamme laminaire premelangee. International Review of the Institut Français du Petrole: in press.
Bougie, B, M Tulej, T Dreier, NJ Dam, JJ ter Meulen, and T Gerber. 2005. Optical diagnostics of diesel spray injections and combustion in a high-pressure high-temperature cell. Applied Physics B: Lasers and Optics 80: 1039-1045. WebsiteAbstract
We report on spatially and temporally resolved optical diagnostic measurements of propagation and combustion of diesel sprays introduced through a single-hole fuel injector into a constant volume, high-temperature, high-pressure cell. From shadowgraphy images in non-reacting environments of pure nitrogen, penetration lengths and dispersion angles were determined for non-vaporizing and vaporizing conditions, and found to be in reasonable agreement with standard models for liquid jet propagation and break-up. Quasi-simultaneous two-dimensional images were obtained of laser elastic light scattering, shadowgraphs and spectrally integrated flame emission in a reacting environment (cell temperature 850 K). In addition laser-induced incandescence was employed for the identification of soot-loaded regions. The simultaneously recorded spray images exhibit remarkable structural similarity and provide complementary information about the spray propagation and combustion process. The measurements also reveal the fuel vapor cloud extending well beyond the liquid core and close to the nozzle tip. Ignition takes place close to the tip of the spray within the mixing layer of fuel vapor and surrounding air. Soot is formed in the vapor core region at the tip of the liquid fuel jet. Our results support recently developed phenomenological model on diesel spray combustion.
Conference Paper
Bougie, B, LC Ganippa, AP Van Vliet, N Dam, WL Meerts, and JJ ter Meulen. 2005. Soot characterization with laser induced incandescence in a heavy duty diesel engine. In European Combustion Meeting 2005. Louvain la Neuve, Belgium.
Journal Article
De Iuliis, S, F Cignoli, and G Zizak. 2005. Two-color laser-induced incandescence (2C-LII) technique for absolute soot volume fraction measurements in flames. Applied Optics 44: 7414-7423.Abstract
A two-color version of the laser-induced incandescence (2C-LII) technique was implemented for measuring absolute soot volume fraction in flames. By using a calibrated tungsten ribbon lamp, soot peak temperatures were measured as a function of fluence at several locations in an ethylene diffusion flame by using a steeply edged laser beam profile. Above a certain fluence threshold, peak temperatures were tightly distributed just above 4000 K independent of the particle size and number density. Radial profiles of soot volume fraction were obtained and compared (not calibrated) with results from the laser extinction technique. Good agreement showed the validity of the 2C-LII technique at a controlled fluence.
Geigle, Klaus Peter, Y Schneider-Kühnle, MS Tsurikov, R Hadef, R Lückerath, V Krüger, W Stricker, and M Aigner. 2005. Investigation of laminar pressurized flames for soot model validation using SV-CARS and LII. Proceedings of the Combustion Institute 30: 1645-1653.Abstract
Quasi-simultaneous measurements of temperature and soot volume fraction in pressurized and atmospheric flames are presented. A dual-flame burner concept yielded stable laminar flames for a variety of equivalence ratios, pressures, and fuels, and permitted the investigation of flames without the influence of soot oxidation. A CARS-based technique (shifted vibrational CARS) for temperature measurements, which offers high accuracy over the entire relevant temperature and soot concentration range, is described. Comparison of temperature measurements in the nonsooting part of a laminar diffusion flame at atmospheric pressure by SV-CARS and conventional N2 Q-branch CARS yielded excellent agreement. This new technique was applied to quasi-1D laminar flames with soot concentrations up to 10 ppm and pressures up to 5 bar. The temperature profiles measured in these flames were combined with soot concentration measurements using LII; calibration and correction for signal trapping yielded quantitative soot volume fraction data. The temperature and soot concentration data were combined to generate a comprehensive dataset for the validation of an improved kinetic soot model for the prediction of soot formation in premixed combustion at elevated pressure.
Krüger, V, C Wahl, R Hadef, Klaus Peter Geigle, W Stricker, and M Aigner. 2005. Comparison of laser-induced incandescence method with scanning mobility particle sizer technique: The influence of probe sampling and laser heating on soot particle size distribution. Measurement Science & Technology 16: 1477-1486.
Snelling, David R, Gregory J Smallwood, Fengshan Liu, Ömer L Gülder, and William D Bachalo. 2005. A calibration-independent laser-induced incandescence technique for soot measurement by detecting absolute light intensity. Applied Optics 44: 6773-6785. WebsiteAbstract
Laser-induced incandescence (LII) has proved to be a useful diagnostic tool for spatially and temporally resolved measurement of particulate (soot) volume fraction and primary particle size in a wide range of applications, such as steady flames, flickering flames, and Diesel engine exhausts. We present a novel LII technique for the determination of soot volume fraction by measuring the absolute incandescence intensity, avoiding the need for ex situ calibration that typically uses a source of particles with known soot volume fraction. The technique developed in this study further extends the capabilities of existing LII for making practical quantitative measurements of soot. The spectral sensitivity of the detection system is determined by calibrating with an extended source of known radiance, and this sensitivity is then used to interpret the measured LII signals. Although it requires knowledge of the soot temperature, either from a numerical model of soot particle heating or experimentally determined by detecting LII signals at two different wavelengths, this technique offers a calibration-independent procedure for measuring soot volume fraction. Application of this technique to soot concentration measurements is demonstrated in a laminar diffusion flame.
Tsurikov, MS, Klaus Peter Geigle, V Krüger, Y Schneider-Kühnle, W Stricker, R Lückerath, R Hadef, and M Aigner. 2005. Laser-based investigation of soot formation in laminar premixed flames at atmospheric and elevated pressures. Combustion Science and Technology 177: 1835-1862. WebsiteAbstract
An experimental investigation into soot formation in laminar premixed flames at atmospheric and elevated pressures (1–5 bar) has been conducted. The flames were produced in a dual-flame burner enclosed in a pressure housing. Quantitative soot volume fraction measurements were obtained using laser-induced incandescence coupled with a quasi-simultaneous absorption measurement for calibration; the data were corrected for signal trapping using an â€\~{}â€\~{}onion peeling’’ algorithm. Temperature measurements were obtained using shifted vibrational coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering, which yields well-resolved, accurate temperature measurements in sooting and nonsooting environments. Results are presented for stable homogeneous flames using air as oxidizer and ethylene, propylene, and toluene as fuels. The variation of soot volume fraction and temperature with height above burner and as a function of fuel,equivalence ratio, and pressure are presented and discussed. The present soot data are well represented by a first-order growth rate law. The data identify trends and features useful for the validation of numerical models of soot formation.
Conference Proceedings
Schulz, Christof. 2005. Laser-induced incandescence: Quantitative Interpretation, Modelling, Application. Christof Schulz. Proc. Intl. Bunsen Discussion Meeting and Workshop. Duisburg, Germany: CEUR Workshop Proceedings. WebsiteAbstract
Papers
  1. Heat conduction issues in laser-induced incandescenceS.-A. Kuhlmann, J. Reimann, S. Will
  2. A detailed experimental and theoretical comparison of spatially-resolved laser-induced incandescence signalsH. Bladh, J. Delhay, Y. Bouvier, E. Therssen, P-E. Bengtsson, P. Desgroux
  3. Investigations of the mechanisms involved in LII particle detectionH. A. Michelsen, M. Y. Gershenzon, P.O. Witze
  4. Influence of polydisperse distributions of both primary particle and aggregate sizes on soot temperature in low-fluence laser-induced incandescenceF. Liu, M. Yang, F. A. Hill, G. J. Smallwood, D. R. Snelling
  5. 2-Color LII measurements of carbon black: Interpretation for quantitative measurement of finenessB.J. Stagg
  6. Wavelength-dependence of refractive index function of soot particle by two-color laser induced incandescenceY. Bouvier, E. Therssen, P. Desgroux
  7. An LII technique independent of ex-situ calibration by detecting absolute light intensityD. R. Snelling, G. J. Smallwood, F. Liu, Ö. L. Gülder, W. D. Bachalo
  8. Laser-induced processes in carbon generated in an argon arcJ.D. Black, M.P. Johnson
  9. An investigation of soot nanoparticulate in a vacuumV. Beyer, D.A. Greenhalgh
  10. Laser-induced incandescence measurements in a laminar co-annular non-premixed methane/air flame at pressures of 0.5 to 4.0 MPaK. A. Thomson, D. R. Snelling, G. J. Smallwood, F. Liu
  11. Laser-induced incandescence and shifted vibrational CARS in laminar premixed flames at atmospheric and elevated pressuresK.P. Geigle, M.S. Tsurikov, W. Meier, V. Krüger, R. Hadef
  12. Laser-induced incandescence and multi-line NO thermometry for soot diagnostics at high pressuresM. Hofmann, H. Kronemayer, B. F. Kock, C. Schulz
  13. Soot particulate size measurements in a heavy duty Diesel engineB. Bougie, L.C. Ganippa, A.P. van Vliet, N.J. Dam, W.L. Meerts, J.J. ter Meulen
  14. Modeling of time-resolved laser-induced incandescence (TIRE-LII) transients for particle sizing in high-pressure spray combustion environmentsT. Dreier, B. Bougie, L. Ganippa, N. Dam, T. Gerber, J.J. ter Meulen
  15. Application of TR-LII for the study of carbon vapor condensation at room temperatureA. Eremin, E. Gurentsov, M. Hofmann, C. Schulz
  16. Planar laser-induced incandescence of iron particles in welding fumesO. Lucas, Z. Alwahabi, V. Linton
  17. Time-resolved laser-induced-incandescence (TR-LII) for iron-particle sizingB. Kock, J. Knipping, H.R. Orthner, C. Kayan, C. Schulz, P. Roth
  18. Laser-induced incandescence of free and surface-adsorbed particlesT. Schittkowski, D. Böker, D. Brüggemann
  19. In-situ determination of gas-to-particle reaction generated nanoscaled particlesM. Charwath, T. Lehre, R. Suntz, H. Bockhorn
  20. Two-dimensional imaging of soot volume fraction and OH in turbulent jet diffusion flames spanning low to high mixing ratesN. H. Qamar, Z.T. Alwahabi, G. J. Nathan, K. D. King
Posters
  1. Peak soot temperature in laser-induced incandescence measurementsS. De Iuliis, F. Cignoli, G. Zizak
  2. Soot volume fractions and primary particle size estimations by means of simultaneous time-resolved and 2D laser-induced incandescenceA. Boiarciuc, F. Foucher, C. Mounaïm-Rousselle
  3. Time-resolved laser-induced incandescence applied to in-cylinder Diesel particle sizingB. F. Kock, C. Schulz, P. Roth
  4. Gas-phase temperature imaging in sooting flames by multi-line NO-LIF thermometryH. Kronemayer, M. Hofmann, K. Omerbegovic, C. Schulz
  5. A critical evaluation of the thermal accommodation coefficient of soot determined by the laser-induced incandescence techniqueF. Liu, D. R. Snelling, G. J. Smallwood
Journal Article
Thomson, Kevin A, Ömer L Gülder, Elizabeth J Weckman, Roydon A Fraser, Gregory J Smallwood, and David R Snelling. 2005. Soot concentration and temperature measurements in co-annular, nonpremixed CH4/air laminar flames at pressures up to 4 MPa. Combustion and Flame 140: 222-232. WebsiteAbstract
Laminar nonpremixed methane–air flames were studied over the pressure range of 0.5 to 4 MPa using a new high-pressure combustion chamber. Flame characterization showed very good flame stability over the range of pressures, with a flame tip rms flicker of less than 1% in flame height. At all pressures, soot was completely oxidized within the visible flame. Spectral soot emission (SSE) and line-of-sight attenuation (LOSA) measurements provided radially resolved measurements of soot volume fraction and soot temperature at pressures from 0.5 to 4.0 MPa. Such measurements provide an improved understanding of the influence of pressure on soot formation and have not been reported previously in laminar nonpremixed flames for pressures above 0.4 MPa. SSE and LOSA soot concentration values typically agree to within 30% and both methods exhibit similar trends in the spatial distribution of soot concentration. Maximum soot concentration depended on pressure according to a power law, where the exponent on pressure is about 2 for the range of pressures between 0.5 and 2.0 MPa, and about 1.2 for 2.0 to 4.0 MPa. Peak carbon conversion to soot also followed a power-law dependence on pressure, where the pressure exponent is unity for pressures between 0.5 and 2.0 MPa and 0.1 for 2.0 to 4.0 MPa. The pressure dependence of sooting propensity diminished at pressures above 2.0 MPa. Soot concentrations measured in this work, when transformed to line-integrated values, are consistent with the measurements of Flower and Bowman for pressures up to 1.0 MPa [Proc. Combust Inst. 21 (1986) 1115–1124] and Lee and Na for pressures up to 0.4 MPa [JSME Int. J. Ser. B 43 (2000) 550–555]. Soot temperature measurements indicate that the overall temperatures decrease with increasing pressure; however, the differences diminish with increasing height in the flame. Low down in the flame, temperatures are about 150 K lower at pressures of 4.0 MPa than those at 0.5 MPa. In the upper half of the flame the differences reduce to 50 K.
Kock, Boris F, Can Kayan, Jörg Knipping, Hans R Orthner, and Paul Roth. 2005. Comparison of LII and TEM sizing during synthesis of iron particle chains. Proceedings of the Combustion Institute 30: 1689-1697. WebsiteAbstract
The two-color version of time-resolved laser-induced incandescence (TR-LII) as well as rapid particle probing and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were applied to the size measurement of chain-like iron particles, synthesized by thermal decomposition of ironpentacarbonyl (Fe(CO)5, IPC) in a hot-wall flow reactor. Both argon and nitrogen were used as carrier gases in different experiments. TR-LII theory considers particle heat transfer and particle evaporation for the interpretation of the measured signals in terms of particle size. The heat transfer from the particle to the surrounding was assumed to proceed under free molecular conditions, which requires the knowledge of the translational energy accommodation coefficient aT during particle cooling. By fitting calculated TR-LII cooling curves to the measured signals, it was possible to determine both aT and the mean primary particle diameter of an assumed lognormal size distribution. Close to the TR-LII measurement section, particles were rapidly sampled and analyzed by TEM. For the obtained chain-like agglomerated particle structures, the TR-LII measured size is in excellent agreement with the TEM determined primary particle size. The method was further validated by variation of the heat-up laser energy density in a wide range of conditions, and the resulting TR-LII diameter was found to be independent of it.