Measurements of vaporized and liquid fuel concentration fields in a burning spray jet of acetone using planar laser induced fluorescence

Planar LIF of acetone has been performed in the near development field of a burning spray jet. The main difficulty of such investigations comes from the large range of signal levels provided by the vapor and the size dispersed spray, which cannot be covered by the camera dynamics. The key point of the present work lies in a strong compression of the fluorescence signal dynamics as the UV laser radiation is strongly absorbed by the liquid phase. Preliminary experiments were made in homogeneous vapor and with calibrated drops to quantify the acetone fluorescence signals. Analysis of the histograms of signal level in the spray shows that a cut-off signal level can be used to reject the contribution of the liquid phase. The single shot fluorescence profiles have been processed to restore the fields of fluctuating and mean concentration of acetone vapor in the spray. The liquid concentration field was obtained by extracting the individual drops data from the single shot fluorescence images with a reduced gain of the camera. A statistical correction accounting for the discrete extinctions of the laser by the drops has been used. Analysis of the results shows the influence of the input atomization parameters on the structures of the condensed and vaporized concentration fields.

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