To
date, the focus of scientific research is the problems associated with the
stabilization of combustion, the features of heat release in the reacting
stream and the formation of harmful emissions in combustion products [1]. An
adequate solution to these problems is associated with the development of
optical diagnostics of reacting jets and flames with obtaining information on
the thermodynamic and structural parameters of the medium under study. Modern
methods of spectroscopy LIF and RAMAN provide data on the temperature and
chemical composition of the flame [2]. At the same time, methods based on
diagnostics of the optical phase density fields of the plume remain in demand.
In combination with classical methods of visualization of flows [3] using
optical tomography [4], such approaches have great potential.
The
article [5] describes a method for assessing the temperature distribution in an
axisymmetric flame using high-contrast stereoscopic photography. Spectral
reconstruction of temperature fields using pyrometry of color ratios and
interferometric tomography is reported [6]. An example of adapted to the
problems of flame research is optical diagnostics based on the methods of
Hilbert optics and interferometry in combination with pixel-by-pixel processing
of the dynamic structure of visualized phase structures induced by temperature
fields [7].
The
development of polychromatic Hilbert optics methods in flame diagnostics with
reconstruction and verification of the spatial phase and temperature structure
is the aim of this work.
The diagnostic complex is
based on the IAB-451 shadow device [8] with modified modules of light emitter,
optical filtering, registration and processing of information.
Fig. 1. Experimental setup based on the IAB-451
device.
The
experimental complex contains an illumination module consisting of a light
source (1) - an RGB LED with operating wavelengths of 636, 537 and 466 nm, a
lens (2) and a slit diaphragm (3) located in the front Fourier plane of the
objective (4), which forms a probing light field in the medium under study. The
Fourier spectrum of phase disturbances induced in the probing field by the
torch (9) is localized in the frequency plane of the objective (5), where the
Hilbert quadrant filter (6) is located, the orientation of which is matched
with the aperture (3). The objective (7) performs an inverse Fourier transform
of the filtered field and forms, depending on the spectral characteristics of
the light source, an optical analytical signal. This signal is recorded by the
photo matrix (8) of the video camera connected to the computer (16).
Directly
behind the Hilbert filter (6) in the frequency plane
for the
filtered Fourier spectrum of the light field
we have:
|
|
(1)
|
where
is the
transfer-function of the filter,
is the Fourier
spectrum of the Hilbert-conjugate optical signal:
|
|
(2)
|
|
|
(3)
|
Phase shift
is a function
of wavelength
,
.
The
objective (7) performs the inverse Fourier transform of the filtered signal:
Recorded by the photo matrix of the
camcorder (8) signal intensity:
where
is a
sensitivity coefficient of the photo matrix. The Foucault-Hilbert transform is
the result of filtering at an arbitrary wavelength
as seen from
(1)-(3). The one-dimensional Hilbert transform is performed at the wavelength
, satisfying
the condition
. The Hilbert transform redistributes the signal
energy from the low spatial frequency region to the high frequency region.
Fig. 2 shows
Hilbert images of a hydrogen-air flame obtained by simultaneous shooting at
three different wavelengths of the radiation source –
=
636 nm,
=
537 nm and
=
466 nm. The fuel mixture from gas cylinders 13-15 using flow meters 10-12 was
fed vertically into stationary air through a tube with an inner diameter of
=
5 mm and a length of 500 mm. The tube material is stainless steel. The
experiments were carried out in the range of Reynolds numbers
Re
.=
1000…2000, satisfying the Poiseuille laminar flow. The composition and
consumption of the fuel mixture of hydrogen with nitrogen was set using a
program-controlled generator of calibration gas mixtures UFPGS-2.
Fig. 2. Hilbert images of
hydrogen-air diffusion flames obtained by simultaneous shooting at three
different wavelengths of the radiation source –
= 636 nm,
= 537 nm and
= 466 nm.
Phase
structure of the probing light field in diagnostics of an axisymmetric flame is
determined in a section with a radius
at a distance
from the end
of the tube through the Abel equation:
|
|
(4)
|
where
;
is the
wavenumber;
is the
refractive index as a function of the distance
from the center
of the section;
is the
refractive index of the medium undisturbed by the flame (Fig. 3).
axis is set by
the direction of the probing light beam. Coordinates
,
limit the size
of the flame section in the direction of the probe beam, and
indicates the
position of the section along the flame axis.
Fig. 3. Flare
section in the plane
= const.
According
to the dispersion formula of Gladstone-Dale [9, 10]
|
|
(5)
|
the refractive index of the
-th component
of the burning mixture depends on the wavelength of the radiation source and
parameters
,
, and
, which are
determined empirically by measuring
for three
different values of
. When
calculating by formula (5), we can restrict ourselves to a term with a
quadratic dependence on the wavelength.
The
refractive index of the entire mixture (hydrogen-air flame) is defined as
|
|
(6)
|
where
is the
pressure;
– atmospheric
pressure under normal conditions (101 325 Pa);
– temperature;
– temperature
under normal conditions (0°C ~ 273 K).
The
method for reconstructing the temperature distribution from the measured values
of the refractive index is based on equation (6), which relates n to the
temperature and composition of the gas mixture at a point. When hydrocarbons
are burned in air, the refractive indices of the reacting components differ
slightly from each other. A hydrogen flame, in contrast to a hydrocarbon flame,
is characterized by a wide variety of partial optical properties of the gas
mixture. In this case, an assessment of the content of the main components
,
,
and
is required.
The sufficiency of such a partial structure for determining the refractive
index of a mixture was verified using experimental data [11]. It should be
noted that when working with a hydrogen-oxygen flame, taking ionization into
account can affect the accuracy of determining the temperature [12].
An image of the
Hilbert-visualized structure of a hydrogen-air flame, obtained synchronously at
three different wavelengths (
= 636 nm,
= 537 nm and
= 466 nm), is
shown in Fig. 4.a. The division of the frame into RGB channels is shown
in Fig. 4.b-4.d.
Fig. 4. (a) –
RGB-hilbertogram of a hydrogen-air flame (
/
, hydrogen
volume fraction 25%); (b) – R-channel,
= 636 nm; (c)
– G-channel,
= 537 nm; (d)
– B-channel,
= 466 nm;
(white line is 6 mm cross-section from the end of the burner tube).
To
solve the inverse problem – to restore the flame temperature
and molar
fractions of fuel combustion products
, it is
necessary to restore the value of the phase function
from the
experimental hilbertogram and, having solved the Abel equation, determine the
refractive index
of the medium.
Thus, by carrying out measurements at different wavelengths and using formulas
(5)-(6), it is possible to restore the values of molar concentrations of fuel
combustion products and, accordingly, the temperature distribution in the
flame.
The
area of combustion of a hydrogen-air flame can be conditionally divided into
two zones, consisting of 3 main chemical elements of combustion products. Inner
zone –
,
and
; outer zone
,
and
. The zone
boundary is the area with the maximum temperature (flame front), since in its
vicinity both the fuel and the oxidizer tend to zero. To determine
and
in each zone it
is sufficient to make measurements at three different wavelengths of the
probing field.
In
fig. 9 there is a graph illustrating the initial recovery of the phase function
at 6 mm from
the end of the burner tube for the R-channel. The red curve represents the
phase function
, the blue
curve is the section of the experimental hilbertogram, the black curve is the
hilbertogram reconstructed from the phase function
. 0 mm is the
center of the burner tube.
The
method for determining the phase function consisted in iterative sequential
selection of the shape and height of the curve represented by the Bezier
polynomial (a special case of B-splines), and the subsequent calculation of the
refractive index
. Further,
according to the distribution
for the
selected area, the hilbertogram is reconstructed, which is compared with the
experimental hilbertogram. The iterative algorithm is repeated until the
coordinates of the local extrema of the experimental and reconstructed hilbertograms
coincide. The coincidence of coordinates of the extrema of the experimental and
reconstructed hilbertograms means checking the results obtained. When restoring
the phase function
, the values
and
were taken
from the reference data.
Fig.
6.a.hows the values of the phase function
in a 6 mm
section for three RGB channels. Fig. 6.
b.hows the radial distributions
of the refractive index
, calculated
from the obtained data
.
During
the experiment, the pressure in the room was equal to 100 500 Pa, the
temperature was 24.8°C, and the air humidity was 19%.
Fig. 5. Experimental
and reconstructed phase functions
and
hilbertograms with a cross section of 6 mm: R-channel,
= 636 nm
a)
|
b)
|
Fig. 6. Section 6 mm: (a)
– reconstructed phase functions
for three RGB
channels; (b) – reconstructed radial profile of the refractive index
for three RGB
channels.
As
a verification of the results obtained, the hilbertograms were calculated from
the reconstructed phase function and compared with the hilbertograms obtained
in the experiment (fig. 7). Comparing the curves, we see that the points of the
local minima of the Hilbert bands on the experimental and reconstructed
hilbertograms coincide. This confirms the reliability of the approximation of
the radial temperature field of a hydrogen-air flame (fig. 8). The
discrepancies in the experimental and reconstructed data are due to the
violation of the axial symmetry of the flame in a real experiment due to the
influence of dynamic disturbances in the air surrounding the flame.
Verification of the
results is provided by comparing the experimentally obtained Hilbertograms and
those reconstructed from phase structures using the Abel transform. One of the
important advantages of the proposed method for flame diagnostics is the
potential for measurements with a spatial resolution of up to several microns,
which makes it possible to study the entire range of scales of the reacting
flow up to Kolmogorov.
Fig.
7. Comparison of experimental and reconstructed hilbertograms: (a –
R-channel; (b – G-channel; (c – B-channel; the solid line is
the section of the experimental hilbertogram, the solid black line is the
reconstructed hilbertogram, the dashed line is the reconstructed phase function
.
Fig.
8.
ÐåReconstructed
radial temperature field of an axisymmetric section of a hydrogen-air flame in
a 6 mm section: solid line – reconstructed temperature
; black dots
are the temperature measured by the thermocouple.
The
method of polychromatic Hilbert visualization of the phase optical density
fields induced by the temperature field in the medium under study is presented
by the example of diagnostics of an axisymmetric diffusion hydrogen-air flame.
RAW images of the rendered field, registered by the photomatrix in RGB
channels, are subjected to pixel-by-pixel processing with Hilbert verification
of the results. The phase structure of the probing light field in the
approximation of axial symmetry of the flame is analyzed using the Abel
transform. Iterative selection of radial temperature profiles, adapted
according to Bezier curves, followed by calculation of the spatial structure of
the refractive index and phase function is performed. The reconstruction of the
temperature field is carried out taking into account the diversity of the
partial optical properties of the gas mixture in a model consistent with the
Gladstone-Dale dispersion formula. The criterion for the reliability of the
results is a comparison of the hilbertograms obtained in the experiment and the
hilbertograms reconstructed from the phase structures induced by the
temperature field.
The work was carried out within the
framework of the state assignment of IT SB RAS No. 121031800217-8.
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