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Quantification of resolution and noise effects on thermal dissipation measurements in turbulent non-premixed jet flames

Wang, G.H.; Barlow, R.S.; Clemens, N.T.

One-dimensional (1-D) line Rayleigh thermometry is used to investigate the effects of spatial resolution and noise on thermal dissipation in turbulent non-premixed CH4/H2/N2 jet flames. The high signal-tonoise ratio and spatial resolution of the measured temperature field enables determination of the cutoff wavenumber in the 1-D temperature dissipation spectrum obtained at each flame location. The local scale inferred from this cutoff is analogous to the Batchelor scale in nonreacting flows. At downstream locations in the flames studied here, it is consistent with estimates of the Batchelor scale based on the scaling laws using local Reynolds numbers. The spectral cutoff information is used to design data analysis schemes for determining mean thermal dissipation. Laminar flame measurements are used to characterize experimental noise and correct for the noise-induced apparent dissipation in the turbulent flame results. These experimentally determined resolution and noise correction techniques are combined to give measurements of the mean thermal dissipation that are essentially fully resolved and noise-free. The prospects of using spectral results from high-resolution 1-D Rayleigh imaging measurements to design filtering schemes for Raman-based measurements of mixture fraction dissipation are also discussed.