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Journal Article

Endoscopic Imaging of Early Flame Propagation in a Near-Production Engine

2014-04-01
2014-01-1178
UV-chemiluminescence from the excited hydroxyl-radical (OH*) has been used as a marker for the high-temperature reacting zone in spark-ignited engines for quite some time. In research engines with large optical access, sensitive camera systems make it possible to obtain images of the flame that can be used for, e.g., determining the flame-front's propagation speed [Aleiferis et al., Combust. Flame 136 (2004) 283-302]. However, on one hand such optical engines are limited in their speed and load range, on the other, typical UV endoscopes make wide-field imaging at low light levels challenging. Here, a large-aperture UV endoscope is used to capture sequences of OH* chemiluminescence during early flame propagation in a nearly unmodified production engine. We compare three imaging systems: phase-locked single-shot imaging, phase-locked double-frame imaging, and “high-speed” cinematography at kHz repetition rates.
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