Author:
Smith M. W.,Cutler A. D.,Millard M.W.,Northam G. B.
Abstract
CARS has become perhaps the most common non-intrusive laser diagnostic
technique used for the analysis of reacting gas flows.1-4
This paper describes the design and calibration of a dual broadband
CARS system assembled to measure single-point, single-shot,
temperature and species concentration in a simulated hydrogen-fueled
scramjet (Supersonic Combustion RamJET) engine model. No scramjet data
are included in this paper. However, the optical system design
features driven by the scramjet engine test environment are discussed.
During calibration, temperatures and relative concentrations of
N2 were derived by fitting single-shot CARS spectra
acquired at 30 Hz. This optical system was derived in part from a
previous 10 Hz system designed for thermometry only5. Since
N2 concentrations were found by spectral fitting, they were
not subject to problems of beam steering, or beam attenuation. These
problems, common in situations with high turbulence levels and
windows, interfere with concentration measurement strategies that
depend on acquiring absolute CARS signal intensities. In fuel-rich
conditions, single-shot temperatures were also found independently by
fitting H2 CARS spectra.