4.6 Article

High-precision flow temperature imaging using ZnO thermographic phosphor tracer particles

Journal

OPTICS EXPRESS
Volume 23, Issue 15, Pages 19453-19468

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OE.23.019453

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Funding

  1. UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)

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Zinc oxide (ZnO) particles are characterised as a tracer for temperature measurements in turbulent flows, in the context of the thermographic particle image velocimetry technique. Flow measurements are used to compare the temperature precision of ZnO to that obtained using a well-characterised thermographic phosphor, BAM:Eu2+, under the same conditions. For this two-colour, ratio-based technique the strongly temperature-dependent redshift of the luminescence emission of ZnO offers improved temperature sensitivity, and so at room temperature a threefold increase in the temperature precision is achieved. A dependence of the intensity ratio on the laser fluence is identified, and additional measurements with different laser pulse durations are used to independently show that there is also a dependence on the laser excitation irradiance, irrespective of fluence. A simple method to correct for these effects is demonstrated and sources of error are analysed in detail. Temperature images in a Re = 2000 jet of air heated to 363 K with a precision of 4 K (1.1%) are presented. The sensitivity of ZnO increases across the tested temperature range 300-500 K, so that at 500 K, using a seeding density of 2 x 1011 particles/m(3), a precision of 3 K (0.6%) is feasible. This new phosphor extends the capabilities of this versatile technique toward the study of flows with small temperature variations. (C) 2015 Optical Society of America

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