Abstract

Evidence of line mixing has been observed in the infrared spectra of many gaseous species at high densities or in the low absorbing windows between optical transitions. However, up to this point, no study exists of nitric oxide line mixing at pressures above atmosphere or temperatures several hundred degrees above room temperature. In this paper, the absorption spectrum of nitric oxide’s R-branch broadened by N2 near 5.2 microns is measured with an external cavity quantum cascade laser in a high-pressure, high-temperature optical static cell over a range of temperatures (294 – 802 K) and pressures (5 – 33 atm). An empirically-based, temperature-dependent line mixing model is built by assembling the impact relaxation matrix from fits (energy gap fitting laws) to pressure broadening coefficients that were measured in a previous study. The resulting line mixing model shows significant improvements over a simple superposition of Lorentzian line shapes when compared to the static cell measurements. To further demonstrate the model’s use, the line mixing model is used to infer temperature in high-pressure (10 – 90 atm) shock tube experiments.

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