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100-kHz-rate gas-phase thermometry using 100-ps pulses from a burst-mode laser
54
Citations
22
References
2015
Year
EngineeringLaser ScienceLaser-plasma InteractionLaser PhysicsLaser ApplicationsHigh-power LasersOptical DiagnosticsOptical PropertiesPulse DurationThermodynamicsInstrumentationOptical SpectroscopyStokes BeamsPhotonicsOptical PumpingPhysicsLaser SpectroscopyRelativistic Laser-matter InteractionEnergetic Materials100-Khz-rate Gas-phase ThermometryNatural SciencesSpectroscopyApplied PhysicsUltrafast OpticsSpectroscopic Method
Temperature measurements based on gas-phase coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) spectroscopy are demonstrated in reacting flows at a rate of 100 kHz employing a burst-mode laser with a pulse duration of ∼100 ps. The recently developed picosecond-duration, high-energy burst-mode laser is used to pump an optical parametric generator/optical parametric amplifier that produces broadband light centered at ∼680 nm to provide the Stokes beams for excitation of the rovibrational Raman transitions of H(2). The 532-nm output of the picosecond burst-mode laser is then utilized as a pump beam for the CARS process that generates 100 single-shot spectra at a rate of 100 kHz during the 1-ms duration burst. Coherent spectroscopy-based temperature measurements at 100 kHz will significantly aid the understanding of transient and unsteady flow phenomena related to turbulent combustion, transonic and hypersonic flows, high-enthalpy flows, and the dynamics of energetic materials.
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