We present the results of an LDRD project, funded by the Nuclear Deterrence IA, to develop capabilities for quantitative assessment of pyrotechnic thermal output. The thermal battery igniter is used as an exemplar system. Experimental methodologies for thermal output evaluation are demonstrated here, which can help designers and engineers better specify pyrotechnic components , provide thermal output guidelines for new formulations, and generate new metrics for assessing component performance and margin given a known failure condition. A heat-transfer analysis confirms that the dominant mode of energy transfer from the pyrotechnic output plume to the heat pellet is conduction via deposition of hot titanium particles. A simple lumped-parameter model of titanium particle heat transfer and a detailed multi-phase model of deposition heat transfer are discussed. Pyrotechnic function, as defined by "go/no-go" standoff testing of a heat pellet, is correlated with experimentally measured igniter plume temperature, titanium metal particle temperature, and energy deposition. Three high-speed thermal diagnostics were developed for this task. A three-color imaging pyrometer, acquiring 100k images per second on three color channels, is deployed for measurement of titanium particle temperatures. Complimentary measurements of the overall igniter plume emission ("color") temperature were conducted using a transmission-grating spectrograph in line-imaging mode. Heat flux and energy deposition to a cold wall at the heat-pellet location were estimated using an eroding thermocouple probe, with a frequency response of ~5 kHz. Ultimate "go/no-go" function in the igniter/heat-pellet system was correlated with quantitative thermal metrics, in particular surface energy deposition and plume color temperature. Titanium metal-particle and plume color temperatures both experience an upper bound approximated by the 3245-K boiling point of TiO2. Average metal-particle temperatures remained nearly constant for all standoff distances at T = 2850 K, ± 300 K, while plume color temperature and heat flux decay with standoff—suggesting that heat-pellet failure results from a drop in metal-particle flux and not particle temperature. At 50% likelihood of heat-pellet failure, peak time-resolved plume color temperatures drop well below TiO2 boiling to ~2000 - 2200 K, near the TiO2 melting point. Estimates of peak heat flux decline from up to 1 GW/m2 for near-field standoffs to below 320 MW/m2 at 50% failure likelihood.
Time-resolved X-ray thermometry is an enabling technology for measuring temperature and phase change of components. However, current diagnostic methods are limited in their ability due to the invasive nature of probes or the requirement of coatings and optical access to the component. Our proposed developments overcome these challenges by utilizing X-rays to directly measure the objects temperature. Variable-Temperature X-ray Diffraction (VT-XRD) was performed over a wide range of temperatures and diffraction angles and was performed on several materials to analyze the patterns of the bulk materials for sensitivity. "High-speed" VT-XRD was then performed for a single material over a small range of diffraction angles to see how fast the experiments could be performed, whilst still maintaining peaks sufficiently large enough for analysis.
When subjected to certain harmonic oscillations, the gas bubble in a partially liquid-filled, closed, vertical cylinder will break up. Under certain conditions, some of the gas will migrate to the bottom due to Bjerknes forces. At sufficiently large amplitudes, the bubble will break up into gas bubbles at the top and bottom ends of the cylinder. High-speed imaging captured the dynamics of bubble breakup and gas migration. Several parameters were investigated: oscillation frequency, oscillation acceleration, gas volume fraction, and liquid viscosity.
A high-speed, two-color pyrometer was developed and employed to characterize the temperature of the ejecta from pyrotechnic igniters. The pyrometer used a single objective lens, beamsplitter, and two high-speed cameras to maximize the spatial and temporal resolutions. The pyrometer used the integrated intensity of under-resolved particles to maintain a large region of interest to capture more particles. The spectral response of the pyrometer was determined based on the response of each optical component and the total system was calibrated using a black body source to ensure accurate intensity ratios over the range of interest.
First-of-their kind datasets from a high-speed X-ray tomography system were collected, and a novel numerical effort utilizing temporal information to reduce measurement uncertainty was shown. The experimental campaign used three high-speed X-ray imaging systems to collect data at 100 kHz of a scene containing high-velocity objects. The scene was a group of known objects propelled by a 12-gauge shotgun shell reaching speeds of hundreds of meters per second. These data represent a known volume where the individual components are known, with experimental uncertainties that can be used for reconstruction algorithm validation. The numerical effort used synthetic volumes in MATLAB to produce projections along known lines of sight to perform tomographic reconstructions. These projections and reconstructions were performed on a single object at two orientations, representing two timesteps, to increase the reconstruction accuracy.
Three ultra-high-speed, 10 MHz, cameras imaged the time-resolved decay of laser-induced incandescence (LII) from soot in a turbulent non-premixed ethylene jet flame. Cameras were equipped with a stereoscope allowing each CMOS array to capture two separate views of the flame. The resulting six views were reconstructed into a volumetric soot decay series using commercially available DaVis tomographic software by LaVision. Primary soot particle sizes were estimated from the decay time history on a per voxel basis by comparing measured signals to an LII model. Experimentally quantified soot particle sizes agree with existing predictions and previous measurements.
X-ray stereo digital image correlation (DIC) measurements were performed at 10 kHz on a jointed-structure in a shock tube at a shock Mach number of 1.42. The X-ray results were compared to optical DIC using visible light. In the X-ray measurements, an internal surface with a tantalum-epoxy DIC pattern was imaged, whereas the optical DIC imaged an external surface. The environment within the shock tube caused temperature and density gradients in the gas through which the structure was imaged, therefore leading to spatial and temporal index of refraction variations. These variations caused beam-steering effects that resulted in bias error in optical DIC measurements. X-rays were used to mitigate the effects of beam-steering caused by the shock tube environment. Beam displacements measured using X-ray DIC followed similar trends (slopes, oscillations amplitudes and frequencies) as optical DIC data while ignoring beam-steering effects. Power spectral densities of both measurements showed peaks at the natural frequencies of the structure. X-ray DIC also has the advantage of being able to image internal structural responses, whereas optical DIC is only capable of measurements on the outer surface of objects.
Knowledge of soot particle sizes is important for understanding soot formation and heat transfer in combustion environments. Soot primary particle sizes can be estimated by measuring the decay of time-resolved laser-induced incandescence (TiRe-LII) signals. Existing methods for making planar TiRe-LII measurements require either multiple cameras or time-gate sweeping with multiple laser pulses, making these techniques difficult to apply in turbulent or unsteady combustion environments. Here, we report a technique for planar soot particle sizing using a single high-sensitivity, ultra-high-speed 10 MHz camera with a 50 ns gate and no intensifier. With this method, we demonstrate measurements of background flame luminosity, prompt LII, and TiRe-LII decay signals for particle sizing in a single laser shot. The particle sizing technique is first validated in a laminar non-premixed ethylene flame. Then, the method is applied to measurements in a turbulent ethylene jet flame.
Halls, Benjamin R.; Hsu, Paul S.; Roy, Sukesh R.; Meyer, Terrence R.; Gord, James G.
two-color, volumetric laser-induced fluorescence (TC-VLIF) was demonstrated for three-dimensional, tomographic imaging of the structural properties of the OH radical and temperature field in a turbulent hydrogen-air flame. Two narrow-band laser sources were tuned to the Qi(5) and Qi(14) transitions of the (1,0) band in the A2E<—X2II system and illuminated a volumetric region of the flame. Images from eight unique perspectives collected simultaneously from each of the two transitions were used to reconstruct overlapping 011 fields with different Boltzmann fractions and map the 3D temperature distribution with nanosecond precision. Key strategies for minimizing sources of error, such as detector sensitivity and spatial overlap of the two fields, are discussed.