Publication Date:
2019-01-25
Description:
The laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) technique is a sensitive and noninvasive method for imaging of flames and for monitoring of temperature and the presence of transient molecular species in flames. Our research effort has two major objectives: (1) to use LIF to study the fundamentals of microgravity combustion via spectroscopic characterization of free radicals, and (2) to design and develop an all-solid-state portable laser unit for combustion studies in a microgravity environment. Well-characterized free radicals, namely hydroxyl (OH) and methoxy (CH3O), have analytically convenient bands that can be laser-excited in the 280-298 nm spectral region with the newly discovered solid-state tunable laser, which is based on the LiCaAIF6:Ce3+(LiCAF:Ce) single crystal pumped by the quadrupled (266 nm) output of a Q-switched YAG:Nd laser. The 266 nm YAG radiation (of about 10 mJ pulse energy) was split into two beams of about equal intensity, one used for photolysis of the free radical precursor and the other used for pumping the laser crystal. Tunability of the LiCAF:Ce laser was provided by a step-motor-driven Littrow-mounted diffraction grating. Laser excitation spectra of the CH3O radical was recorded in the 291.5-296.5 nm region with 0.15 cm(exp -1) resolution. Laboratory experiments have thus successfully shown that the idea of using the LiCAF:Ce laser as a dual-purpose photolysis and excitation source can pay rich dividends and that such a laser can be the center piece of an all-solid-state portable device that can be used for routine analytical investigations of microgravity combustion phenomena.
Keywords:
LASERS AND MASERS
Type:
NASA. Lewis Research Center, HBCUs Research Conference Agenda and Abstracts; p 26
Format:
text
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