Abstract

The flicker of a flame is an important physical parameter associated with the characteristics of a combustion process. This paper presents a novel instrumentation system developed for on-line continuous flicker measurements of combustion flames. The system comprises a high-speed CCD camera, a frame grabber and associated image processing software. The flicker signal was obtained by processing the radiation intensity of individual pixels within the luminous region of a flame image. Power spectral density analysis was performed to obtain the frequency components of the flicker signal. The quantitative flicker of a flame is defined in terms of weighted spectral components in the frequency domain and this definition has been proven to be well suited to quantification of the flickering characteristics of a flame. A tungsten lamp driven by a frequency-varying power supply was employed to calibrate the measurement system. The calibration results show that the system is capable of measung the flicker of an unknown light source with a relative error no greater than 3% . The system developed has been utilized to investigate the relationship between the flicker of a diffusion flame and the burner diameter, and to study the effect of the equivalence ratio on the flicker of a premixed flame under a range of combustion conditions. The experimental results obtained by both motion image analysis and spectral analysis have demonstrated that the flicker of a diffusion flame depends predominantly on the burner diameter. It has also been found that the flicker of a premixed flame varies with the equivalence ratio and a peak flicker exists for a given air flow rate.

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