4.6 Article

Millimeter-Wave Interferometry for Opaque Particle-Laden Flows

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMTT.2023.3277527

Keywords

Interferometry; millimeter-wave (mm-Wave); multiphase flow; permittivity; radar

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This paper presents a novel method for measuring the concentration of particles in optically opaque particle-laden flows. The method utilizes millimeter wave interferometry to measure the path-integrated particle concentrations using a fully-integrated FMCW radar. The instrument is capable of high-speed and quantitative measurements in dispersed multiphase flows with higher concentrations than existing optical methods. Calibration and validation experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the measurement concept.
A novel method to measure the concentration of particles in optically opaque particle-laden flows is presented. This method is based on the principle of millimeter wave interferometry, using a fully-integrated frequency modulated continuouswave (FMCW) radar operating between 77 and 81 GHz to measure path-integrated particle concentrations between the radar and a reflector. The instrument is capable of quantitative, high-speed (20 kHz) path-integrated concentration measurements in dispersed multiphase flows with concentrations one to two orders of magnitude higher than those at reach with state-ofthe-art optical methods. The interferometer was demonstrated and calibrated for path-integrated number concentrations up to (4.36 +/- 0.24) x 10(8) m(-2) using glass microspheres with a mean diameter of 109.2 mu m. Two independent measurements of particle size distribution (PSD) were performed using X-ray microtomography and dry sieving. The calibration setup relied on high-resolution particle shadowgraphy applied to individual thin particle streams and used multistreams superposition to reproduce large optical depths in a controlled particle-air mixture. The instrument exhibited excellent linearity and low error during the calibration, with a phase shift-to-number concentration slope of (1.378 +/- 0.043) x 10(-7) m(2), validating the measurement concept and paving the way for practical applications. The leading uncertainties are discussed, providing guidelines for exploiting the measurement concept without necessarily performing a direct calibration.

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