Filamentary anemometry using femtosecond laser-extended electric discharge - FALED

2018 
We demonstrate a non-contact spatiotemporally resolved comprehensive method for gas flow velocity field measurement: Filamentary Anemometry using femtosecond Laser-extended Electric Discharge (FALED). A faint thin plasma channel was generated in ambient air by focusing an 800-nm laser beam of 45 fs, which was used to ignite a pulsed electric discharge between two electrodes separated over 10 mm. The power supplier provided a maximum voltage up to 5 kV and was operated at a burst mode with a current duration of less than 20 ns and a pulse-to-pulse separation of 40 μs. The laser-guided thin filamentary discharge plasma column was blowing up perpendicularly by an air jet placed beneath in-between the two electrodes. Although the discharge pulse was short, the conductivity of the plasma channel was observed to sustain much longer, so that a sequence of discharge filaments was generated as the plasma channel being blown up by the jet flow. The sequential bright thin discharge filaments can be photographed using a household camera to calculate the flow velocity distribution of the jet flow. For a direct comparison, a flow field measurement using FLEET [Michael, Appl. Opt. 50, 5158 (2011)] was also performed. The results indicate that the FALED technique can provide instantaneous nonintrusive flow field velocity measurement with good accuracy. (Less)
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