1991-02-01

Exciplex-Based Fluorescence Method for Remote Probing of Fuel Droplet Temperature 910729

Exciplex-based fluorescence was employed for the remote, nonintrusive, instantaneous and point measurements of fuel droplet temperature. A hydrocarbon droplet doped with naphthalene and TMPD was allowed to evaporate in a heated gaseous mixture of oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide and water. The fluorescence emission spectra from a droplet subjected to nitrogen laser excitation were measured with an optical multichannel analyzer. Photographic observation showed that a droplet fluoresced with a green color at room temperature. As the temperature was raised, fluorescence became purple. The ratio of fluorescence emission intensities at two different wavelengths was an appropriate criterion for in situ determination of droplet temperature. Oxygen in the ambient gas was found to be a major quencher for the fluorescence. Droplet velocity relative to the ambient gas did not have an appreciable influence on the fluorescence emission spectra.

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