Rapid temperature measurement by wavelength modulation spectroscopy
11467037 · 2022-10-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01J3/10
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
Aspects of the present disclosure describe rapid temperature measurement by wavelength modulation spectroscopy (WMS) that determines gas temperature from 2ƒ signals from two absorption lines by WMS methodologies even when the gas concentration is sufficiently high to saturate optical absorptions. In sharp contrast to the prior art, rapid temperature measurement by WMS according to aspects of the present disclosure employs both a 2ƒ signal ratio and gas concentration determined from the 2ƒ signal.
Claims
1. A wavelength modulation spectroscopy (WMS) method for rapid temperature measurement of a gas comprising: determining the gas temperature T from a peak or peak-trough height ratio R obtained from a WMS 2ƒ signal and gas concentration C, according to the following nonlinear function
T=p.sub.1+p.sub.2.Math.C.Math.R+p.sub.3.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.2+p.sub.4.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.5.Math.R+p.sub.6.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.7.Math.C.sup.6.Math.R.sup.6+p.sub.8.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.4 where p.sub.1 to p.sub.8 are all parameters determined by calibration.
2. The wavelength modulation spectroscopy method for rapid temperature measurement of a gas according to claim 1 further comprising: determining a set of calibration parameters p.sub.1 to p.sub.8 by i) At a known gas temperature T, measure a peak or peak-trough height ratio R of two absorption peaks included in the 2ƒ signal for that gas; ii) Determine the current concentration C from the peak (or peak-trough) height ratio and the trough distance of either one of the peaks; iii) Repeat i) and ii) at different T, R, or C for at least 8 times, determining at least 8 groups of T, R, and C; and determining p.sub.1 through p.sub.8 by fitting the groups of T, R, C by the nonlinear function
T=p.sub.1+p.sub.2.Math.C.Math.R+p.sub.3.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.2+p.sub.4.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.5.Math.R+p.sub.6.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.7.Math.C.sup.6.Math.R.sup.6+p.sub.8.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.4.
3. The wavelength modulation method for rapid temperature measurement of a gas according to claim 2 further comprising: measure the peak or peak-trough height ratio R of two absorption peaks in the 2ƒ signal; determine the current concentration C from the peak or peak-trough height and trough distance of either one of the two absorption peaks in the 2ƒ signal; determine T, by substituting the measured values of R and C into the nonlinear equation
T=p.sub.1+p.sub.2C.Math.R+p.sub.3.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.2+p.sub.4.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.5.Math.R+p.sub.6.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.7.Math.C.sub.6.Math.R.sup.6+p.sub.8.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.4.
4. The wavelength modulation method for rapid temperature measurement of a gas according to claim 3 wherein the gas is of unknown concentration.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
(1) A more complete understanding of the present disclosure may be realized by reference to the accompanying drawing in which:
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(6) The illustrative embodiments are described more fully by the Figures and detailed description. Embodiments according to this disclosure may, however, be embodied in various forms and are not limited to specific or illustrative embodiments described in the drawing and detailed description.
DESCRIPTION
(7) The following merely illustrates the principles of the disclosure. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various arrangements which, although not explicitly described or shown herein, embody the principles of the disclosure and are included within its spirit and scope.
(8) Furthermore, all examples and conditional language recited herein are intended to be only for pedagogical purposes to aid the reader in understanding the principles of the disclosure and the concepts contributed by the inventor(s) to furthering the art and are to be construed as being without limitation to such specifically recited examples and conditions.
(9) Moreover, all statements herein reciting principles, aspects, and embodiments of the disclosure, as well as specific examples thereof, are intended to encompass both structural and functional equivalents thereof. Additionally, it is intended that such equivalents include both currently known equivalents as well as equivalents developed in the future, i.e., any elements developed that perform the same function, regardless of structure.
(10) Thus, for example, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that any block diagrams herein represent conceptual views of illustrative circuitry embodying the principles of the disclosure.
(11) Unless otherwise explicitly specified herein, the FIGS. comprising the drawing are not drawn to scale.
(12) By way of some additional background, we begin by noting as is known that molecules can absorb light at certain wavelengths which causes them to transition from a lower energy level to an upper energy level. The amount of light that is absorbed is proportional to the fraction of molecules in an absorbing quantum state. Laser absorption spectroscopy (LAS) exploits this relationship to provide quantitative measurements of gas temperature and composition/concentration. Wavelength modulation spectroscopy (WMS) is a LAS technique that is known to provide improved measurements of gas(es).
(13) In wavelength modulation spectroscopy (WMS) the wavelength of light emitted from a tunable light source—such as a diode laser—is modulated with a frequency ƒ.sub.0, while the wavelength is swept over a molecular absorption line of a gas component of interest in a gas sample. As the light propagates along a measurement path through the gas sample, wavelength dependent absorption converts some of the wavelength modulation into an amplitude modulation of the light. Thus, the light will have an overtone spectrum generated by the absorption, the harmonic content of the spectrum being dependent on the width and shape of the molecular absorption line in the gas and the etalons in the optical path of the measuring system. When the light then impinges onto a measuring detector, for example a photodiode, the detector output contains AC components at the modulation frequency ƒ.sub.0 and its higher harmonics Mƒ.sub.0 (M=2,3,4, etc.). Demodulating the detector output at one of said higher harmonics—preferably at 2ƒ—shifts the measurement from frequencies near DC, where the light source is noisy, into a higher frequency range, where the noise is lower, thus improving the measurement sensitivity.
(14) Turning now to
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(16) With simultaneous reference to these figures, it may be observed that in
(17) According to aspects of the present disclosure then, a gas concentration is introduced with the peak height ratio to measure the temperature by 2ƒ signal with—according to this inventive disclosure—with saturated absorption peak(s). A calibration method employing a nonlinear fitting curve is utilized to determine/calculate the temperature.
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(19) Broadly, the gas temperature T is determined from peak (or peak-trough) height ratio R and gas concentration C, according to the following nonlinear function:
T=p.sub.1+p.sub.2.Math.C.Math.R+p.sub.3.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.2+p.sub.4.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.5.Math.R+p.sub.6.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.7.Math.C.sup.6.Math.R.sup.6+p.sub.8.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.4
where p.sub.1 to p.sub.8 are all parameters determined by calibration.
(20) To determine calibration parameters p.sub.1 to p.sub.8, the following steps are performed: 1. At a known gas temperature T, measure a current peak (or peak-trough) height ratio R of two absorption peaks included in the 2ƒ signal for that gas; 2. Determine the current concentration C from the peak (or peak-trough) height ratio and the trough distance of either one of the peaks; 3. Repeat 1) and 2) at different T, R, or C for at least 8 times, determining at least 8 groups of T, R, and C; 4. Determine p.sub.1 through p.sub.8 by fitting the groups of T, R, C by the nonlinear function
T=p.sub.1+p.sub.2.Math.C.Math.R+p.sub.3.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.2+p.sub.4.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.5.Math.R+p.sub.6.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.7.Math.C.sup.6.Math.R.sup.6+p.sub.8.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.4.
(21) With calibration performed one may quickly determine the temperature T of an unknown gas concentration by: 1) Measure the current peak (or peak-trough) height ratio R of the two absorption peaks in the 2ƒ signal; 2) Determine the current concentration C from the peak (or peak-trough) height and the trough distance of either one of the two absorption peaks of in the 2ƒ signal; 3) To determine T, substitute the measured values of R and C into the nonlinear equation
T=p.sub.1+p.sub.2C.Math.R+p.sub.3.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.2+p.sub.4.Math.C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.5.Math.R+p.sub.6.Math.C.sup.2.Math.R.sup.3+p.sub.7.Math.C.sub.6.Math.R.sup.6+p.sub.8C.sup.3.Math.R.sup.4.
(22) Operationally, such calibration and temperature measurement may be advantageously performed by a system such as that shown in
(23) While we have presented this disclosure using some specific examples, those skilled in the art will recognize that our teachings are not so limited. Accordingly, this disclosure should be only limited by the scope of the claims attached hereto.