Abstract

We report on the development of high-repetition rate planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) imaging of the CH radical in turbulent flames. This paper presents what the authors believe to be the first multi-frame, high-speed CH PLIF image sequences captured in a turbulent nonpremixed jet-flame. The high-repetition rate CH PLIF measurements were made using a combination of a custom pulse burst laser system operating at a 10-kHz repetition rate, an in-house optical parametric oscillator (OPO) with frequency mixing for 390-nm laser pulse generation, and a high-framing rate ICCD camera for high-speed image capture. The 1064-nm output of the pulse burst laser is frequency-tripled (355nm) and used to pump the OPO, which can be operated in a narrow bandwidth (300MHz) or broadband (4cm−1) mode. The OPO system produces a burst of laser pulses near 615nm, which can be subsequently mixed with residual 1064-nm output from the pulse burst laser to generate a series of 390-nm pulses separated by less than 100μs. The tunable ultraviolet output around 390nm is then used to excite the B–X (0,0) band allowing high-speed image sequences of the CH radical to be acquired from the B–X(0,1), A–X(1,1), and A–X(0,0) bands near 430nm. In this paper, we present results using the narrow bandwidth mode of the laser. By injection seeding the OPO with a single-frequency diode laser, we can obtain spectrally-narrow output at 390-nm, which allows imaging of CH with only 0.4mJ/pulse of laser energy. Ten-kilohertz-CH PLIF image sequences from a turbulent nonpremixed flame are reported as an example of the potential of this diagnostic system. Although, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is marginal, we discuss future improvements to the system to increase the SNR to levels comparable to that achieved with traditional low-repetition rate systems.

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