Current Search: Reyes, Jonathan (x)
View All Items
- Title
- Development of a Single Sensor Approach for Capturing Three-Dimensional, Time Resolved Flame and Velocity Information.
- Creator
-
Reyes, Jonathan, Ahmed, Kareem, Kassab, Alain, Kapat, Jayanta, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
-
Performing non-intrusive measurements is the key to acquiring accurate information representative of what is being observed. The act of measuring often changes the environment being observed altering the information that is being obtained. Due to this, the community of fluid scientists have gravitated towards using laser-based measurements to observe the phenomena occurring in their experiments. The study of fluids has advanced since this point, utilizing techniques such as planar laser...
Show morePerforming non-intrusive measurements is the key to acquiring accurate information representative of what is being observed. The act of measuring often changes the environment being observed altering the information that is being obtained. Due to this, the community of fluid scientists have gravitated towards using laser-based measurements to observe the phenomena occurring in their experiments. The study of fluids has advanced since this point, utilizing techniques such as planar laser induced florescence (PLIF), particle image velocimetry (PIV), laser doppler velocimetry (LDV), particle doppler anemometry (PDA), etc. to acquire chemical species information and velocity information. These techniques, though, are inherently two-dimensional and cannot fully describe a flow field. In the area of reacting flow fields (combustion) acquiring the local fuel to air ratio information is increasingly important. Without it, scientist must rely on global one-dimensional metering techniques to correlate the fuel to air ratio of their flow field of interest. By knowing the fuel to air ratio locally and spatially across a flame, the location of products and reactants can be deduced, giving insight into any inefficiencies associated with a burner. Knowing the spatial fuel air field also gives insights into the density gradient associated with the flow field. Discussed in this work will be the development of a non-intrusive local fuel-air measurement technique and an expansion of the PIV technique into the third dimension, tomographic PIV, utilizing only one camera to do so for each measurement. The local fuel-air measurement is performed by recording two species (C2* and CH*) simultaneously and calibrating their ratio to the known fuel-air field. Tomographic PIV is performed by utilizing fiber coupling to acquire multiple viewpoints utilizing a single camera.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2019
- Identifier
- CFE0007523, ucf:52602
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0007523
- Title
- Simultaneous Imaging of the Diatomic Carbon and Methylidyne Species Radicals for the Quantification of the Fuel to Air Ratio from Low to High Pressure Combustion.
- Creator
-
Reyes, Jonathan, Ahmed, Kareem, Kassab, Alain, Kapat, Jayanta, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
-
The radical intensity ratio of the diatomic carbon to methylidyne was characterized at initialpressures up to 10 bar using certified gasoline of 93% octane. This gasoline was selected due toits availability as a common fuel. The characterization of the radical intensity ratio of gasoline atelevated pressures enabled the creation of a calibration map of the equivalence ratio at enginerelevant conditions.The proposed calibration map acts as a feedback loop for a combustor. It allows for...
Show moreThe radical intensity ratio of the diatomic carbon to methylidyne was characterized at initialpressures up to 10 bar using certified gasoline of 93% octane. This gasoline was selected due toits availability as a common fuel. The characterization of the radical intensity ratio of gasoline atelevated pressures enabled the creation of a calibration map of the equivalence ratio at enginerelevant conditions.The proposed calibration map acts as a feedback loop for a combustor. It allows for thelocation of local rich and lean zones. The local information acquired can be used as an optimizationparameter for injection and ignition timings, and future combustor designs. The calibration map isapplicable at low and high engine loads to characterize a combustors behavior at all points in itsoperation map.Very little emphasis has been placed on the radical intensity ratio of unsteady flames,flames at high pressure, and liquid fuels. The current work performed the measurement on anunsteady flame ignited at different initial pressures employing a constant volume combustionchamber and liquid gasoline as the fuel source. The chamber can sustain a pressure rise of 200 barand allows for homogenous fuel to air mixtures.The results produced a viable calibration map from 1 to 10 bar. The intensity ratio at initialpressures above 5 bar behaved adversely in comparison to the lower pressure tests. The acquiredratios at the higher initial pressures are viable as individual calibration curves, but created anunexpected calibration map. The data shows promise in creating a calibration map that is usefulfor practical combustors.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017
- Identifier
- CFE0006910, ucf:51692
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0006910