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Original Articles

Laser Excited Emission and Chemiluminescence from Autoigniting Spray

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Pages 129-147 | Received 12 Nov 1998, Published online: 27 Apr 2007
 

Abstract

The work presented in this paper deals with the synchronous multiwavelength detection of thermal, chemiluminescent and laser-excited (λ0=266nm) emission from spray of a large saturated paraffin (tetradecane) in auto-igniting conditions. Two of these have been selected by varying oxygen molar fraction (0.13 and 0.21) of high pressure (2MPa), high temperature oxidant (900K) stream yielding non-sooting combustion

The main measured spectroscopic feature was an isolated broadband fluorescence signal detected around λ=330nm. This signal is here attributed to aldehyde functionality on the basis of both calibration tests, performed on liquid aldehydes with the same optical set-up. and literature data relative lo fluorescence and chemiluminescence measurements in simpler conditions. Furthermore, temporal evolution of this signal, in the conditions reported here, is consistent with two-step ignition kinetics of paraffins to which a large production of aldehydes and ketones is related. Chemiluminescence maximum, due to HCO and C2 radicals, is slightly delayed with respect to the fluorescence maximum and is in synchrony with a minimum of the aldehydic species fluorescence signal. These maxima and minima mark unambiguously the time interval in which combustion evolves in premixed and diffusion controlled conditions, when pyrolitic species formation occurs.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

A. CAVALIERE

[email protected]

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