scholarly journals Application of the subsecond calorimetry technique with both contact and radiance temperature measurements: case study on solid phase tungsten at very high temperatures

Author(s):  
Nenad D. Milošević

AbstractThis work presents an application of the subsecond calorimetry technique at very high temperatures, which uses both contact and radiance temperature measurements. This technique is normally applied for thermophysical characterization of high temperature solid phase materials in the temperature range from ambient up to about 2600 K, which is the limit of the standard tungsten-rhenium thermocouple use. Simultaneously with contact temperature measurements, noncontact or radiance temperature detection may be performed in the approximate range from 1000 to 2600 K in order to acquire information on spectral normal emissivity of specimen under test. In this study, however, the specimen is heated above 2600 K and, then, the temperature is measured only by the noncontact mean. In the extended temperature range, the obtained values of the spectral normal emissivity are extrapolated for each experimental run, which makes possible a conversion from radiance to absolute specimen temperature. In order to test this application, a pure polycrystalline specimen of tungsten in the form of rod, 3 mm in diameter and 200 mm in length, has been used. The specimen has been heated in vacuum environment of about 10–4 mbar by short pulses of high DC current with a gradual increase of the total heating time from about 0.5–2.5 s. During the specimen heating and the beginning of the cooling period, four sets of experimental data have been recorded and reduced by using the corresponding data reduction procedure. Obtained results of specific heat and specific electrical resistivity from ambient to 3700 K, total hemispherical emissivity from 1000 to 3700 K and spectral normal emissivity from 1000 to 2600 K (extrapolated to 3700 K) are presented, discussed and compared with related literature data.

Author(s):  
Debashis Mukherji ◽  
Joachim Rösler ◽  
Pavel Strunz ◽  
Ralph Gilles ◽  
Gerhard Schumacher ◽  
...  

In the first paper of this series (Burgoyne 1937) the kinetics of the isothermal oxidation above 400° C of several aromatic hydrocarbons was studied. The present communication extends this work to include the phenomena of ignition in the same temperature range, whilst the corresponding reactions below 400° C form the subject of further investigations now in progress. The hydrocarbons at present under consideration are benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, n -propylbenzene, o-, m - and p -xylenes and mesitylene.


1988 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 315-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. T. Malmo ◽  
O. J. Jøkberg ◽  
G. A. Slettemoen
Keyword(s):  

2009 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 430-435 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Li ◽  
H.H. Hng ◽  
J. Ma ◽  
X.Y. Qin

The thermoelectric properties of Nb-doped Zn4Sb3 compounds, (Zn1–xNbx)4Sb3 (x = 0, 0.005, and 0.01), were investigated at temperatures ranging from 300 to 685 K. The results showed that by substituting Zn with Nb, the thermal conductivities of all the Nb-doped compounds were lower than that of the pristine β-Zn4Sb3. Among the compounds studied, the lightly substituted (Zn0.995Nb0.005)4Sb3 compound exhibited the best thermoelectric performance due to the improvement in both its electrical resistivity and thermal conductivity. Its figure of merit, ZT, was greater than the undoped Zn4Sb3 compound for the temperature range investigated. In particular, the ZT of (Zn0.995Nb0.005)4Sb3 reached a value of 1.1 at 680 K, which was 69% greater than that of the undoped Zn4Sb3 obtained in this study.


1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (7) ◽  
pp. 1029-1039 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Laubitz

A method is given for exact mathematical analysis of linear heat flow systems used in measuring thermal conductivity at high temperatures. It is shown that a popular version of such a system is very sensitive to the alignment of its components, which seriously limits the temperature range of its satisfactory use.


During the researches upon high-pressure explosions of carbonic oxide-air, hydrogen-air, etc., mixtures, which have been described in the previous papers of this series, a mass of data has been accumulated relating to the influence of density and temperature upon the internal energy of gases and the dissociation of steam and carbon dioxide. Some time ago, at Prof. Bone’s request, the author undertook a systematic survey of the data in question, and the present paper summarises some of the principal results thereof, which it is hoped will throw light upon problems interesting alike to chemists, physicists and internal-combustion engineers. The explosion method affords the only means known at present of determining the internal energies of gases at very high temperatures, and it has been used for this purpose for upwards of 50 years. Although by no means without difficulties, arising from uncertainties of some of the assumptions upon which it is based, yet, for want of a better, its results have been generally accepted as being at least provisionally valuable. Amongst the more recent investigations which have attracted attention in this connection should be mentioned those of Pier, Bjerrum, Siegel and Fenning, all of whom worked at low or medium pressures.


2004 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 84-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leo van Wüllen ◽  
Georg Schwering ◽  
Ernst Naumann ◽  
Martin Jansen
Keyword(s):  
Mas Nmr ◽  

1989 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 327-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Hofmann ◽  
Siegfried J. L. Hagen ◽  
Gerhard Schanz ◽  
Alfred Skokan

2021 ◽  
pp. 2150392
Author(s):  
B. D. Urmanov ◽  
M. S. Leanenia ◽  
G. P. Yablonskii ◽  
O. B. Taghiyev ◽  
K. O. Taghiyev ◽  
...  

Photoluminescence properties of [Formula: see text] chalcogenide semiconductors have been studied under the impulse laser excitation in the range of 10–105 W/cm2 at room temperature. This study has shown that as a result of excitation, photoluminescence of [Formula: see text] is characterized by the emission in the interval of 450–575 nm with significant domination in the spectra line at 660 nm. Photoluminescence of [Formula: see text] quenches at wavelengths of 560 nm and 660 nm with constant time frames 258 ns and 326 ns, respectively. Moreover, the temperature measurements of photoluminescence were performed on the samples in the temperature range of 10–300 K.


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