Particle & Particle Systems Characterization, Vol.14, No.5, 233-242, 1997
Simultaneous droplet size and gas-phase turbulence measurements in a spray flow using phase-Doppler interferometry
A recently developed method to increase the sensitivity of a phase-Doppler interferometer (PDI) has been applied to an annular air flow interacting with a spray under isothermal conditions in order to demonstrate the applicability of the method to obtaining velocity and turbulence characteristics of the gasphase in a two-phase flow. A conventional PDI system operated in the first order refraction mode cannot be configured to efficiently detect small seed particles in the presence of large droplets due to the limited dynamic range of the photodetectors. It is therefore difficult or impossible to obtain seed particle detection rates sufficient for turbulence measurements. Doping the spray with a very small quantity of dye preferentially attenuates the light intensity scattered by large droplets, thus allowing the PDI system to detect small seed particles without damaging the photodetectors when large particles are present in the flow. Application of this method to a two-phase flow produced by a pressure-swirl atomizer coaxially located within an annular air jet has resulted in profiles of axial mean and fluctuating velocities and shear stresses as well as integral time scales and turbulent energy spectra.