Abstract

This contribution investigates a novel laser ignition method based on a dual-pulse resonant pre-ionization scheme. The first laser pulse efficiently creates initial gas ionization (seed electrons) through a 2 + 1 resonantly-enhanced multiphoton ionization (REMPI) scheme targeting molecular oxygen (λ ~ 287.6 nm). This pulse is followed by a second non-resonant near-infrared pulse (λ = 1064 nm) for energy addition into the gas via inverse bremsstrahlung absorption. The sequence of two pulses creates a laser induced plasma that exhibits high peak electron number density and temperature (ne ~ 8 × 1017 cm-3 at t = 100 ns and T ~ 8000 K at t = 10 μs, respectively). These plasma parameters are similar to those attained for typical single-pulse near-infrared laser plasmas but with the advantage of substantially lower pulse energy (by factor of ~ 2.5) in the dual-pulse REMPI case. A combustion study focusing on ignition of propane/air mixtures shows that the dual-pulse REMPI method leads to an extension of the lean flammability limit, and an increase in combustion efficiency near the lean limit, as compared to laser ignition with a single NIR pulse. The measurement results and observed gas dynamics are discussed in the context of their impact on combustion applications.

Highlights

  • The current study presents a new laser ignition technique based on resonant pre-ionization of oxygen molecules at ~ 287.6 nm

  • The presence of resonant photoionization was confirmed via rotationally resolved spectra for the two-photon excitation of the C3 g v′ = 2

  • Ignition testing with the dual-pulse REMPI technique showed the possibility of increased combustion efficiency at lean conditions as compared to other laser ignition schemes

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Summary

Introduction

The plasma was further characterized using Thomson and Rayleigh scattering to determine the electron number density and gas temperature evolution after the spark. Laser type REMPI UV NIR Thomson/Rayleigh scattering

Results
Conclusion
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