scholarly journals Temperature measurement techniques for gas and liquid flows using thermographic phosphor tracer particles

2018 ◽  
Vol 64 ◽  
pp. 93-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Abram ◽  
Benoît Fond ◽  
Frank Beyrau
Author(s):  
Moritz Stelter ◽  
Fabio J. W. A. Martins ◽  
Frank Beyrau ◽  
Benoît Fond

Many flows of technical and scientific interest are intrinsically three-dimensional. Extracting slices using planar measurement techniques allows only a limited view into the flow physics and can introduce ambiguities while investigating the extent of 3D regions. Nowadays, thanks to tremendous progress in the field of volumetric velocimetry, full 3D-3C velocity information can be gathered using tomographic PIV or PTV hence eliminating many of these ambiguities (Discetti and Coletti, 2018; Westerweel et al., 2013). However, for scalar quantities like temperature, 3D measurements remain challenging. Previous approaches for coupled 3D thermometry and velocimetry combined astigmatism PTV with encapsulated europium chelates particles (Massing et al., 2018) or tomographic PIV with thermochromic liquid crystals particles (Schiepel et al., 2021). Here we present a new technique based on solid thermographic phosphor tracer particles, which have been extensively used for planar fluid temperature and velocity measurements (Abram et al., 2018) and are applicable in a wide range of temperatures. The particles are seeded into a gas flow where their 3D positions are retrieved by triangulation from multiple views and their temperatures are derived from two-colour luminescence ratio imaging. In the following, the experimental setup and key processing steps are described before a demonstration of the concept in a turbulent heated jet is shown.


2018 ◽  
Vol 102 (19) ◽  
pp. 8525-8536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anastasiia V. Krivoruchko ◽  
Anastasia Yu Iziumova ◽  
Maria S. Kuyukina ◽  
Oleg A. Plekhov ◽  
Oleg B. Naimark ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Kil-Mo Koo ◽  
Kwang-Soon Ha ◽  
Rae-Joon Park ◽  
Sang-Baik Kim ◽  
Hee-Dong Kim ◽  
...  

The temperature measurement of a very high temperature core melt is of importance in LAVA (lower-plenum Arrested Vessel Attack) experiment in which gap formation between core melt and the reactor lower head, and the effect of the gap on thermal behavior are to be measured. The existing temperature measurement techniques have some problems, where the thermocouple, one of the contact methods, is restricted to under 2000°C, and the infrared thermometry, one of the non-contact methods, is unable to measure an internal temperature and very sensitive to the interference from reacted gases. So, in order to solve these problems, the delay time of ultrasonic wavelets due to high temperature is suggested. One of the key initial conditions to be measured in LAVA is the initial corium melt temperature. To measure it, the LAVA measurement group has developed several kinds of UTS’s. As a first stage, a molten material temperature was measured up to 2314°C. Also, the optimization design of the UTS (ultrasonic temperature sensor) with persistence at the high temperature was suggested in this paper. And the utilization of the theory suggested in this paper and the efficiency of the developed system are certified by performing experiments.


2012 ◽  
Vol 20 (20) ◽  
pp. 22118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benoit Fond ◽  
Christopher Abram ◽  
Andrew L Heyes ◽  
Andreas M Kempf ◽  
Frank Beyrau

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