Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
659688 International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer 2011 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The surface temperature inside an optical engine was measured both with and without heating the intake gas. The temperature distribution was measured by lifetime-based phosphor thermometry using 10 time-sequential images during a single decay recorded by a non-intensified high-speed complementary metal oxide semiconductor camera and by accounting for the pixel-to-pixel variation in the nonlinearity of the sensor. Consequently, the system was simple and compact. One goal of this research is to use a single camera to measure the temperature field because it is easy to use such a system in practical experiments. The shot-to-shot standard deviation of the decay constant for uniform temperature conditions was 0.17–0.33% at 80–160 °C and it varied ±0.15% with position, indicating that the pixel nonlinearity is highly nonuniform. The present measurement method had a measurement error of −2.25 to 1.15 °C and it exhibited a similar level of shot-to-shot fluctuations (±0.42–2.34 °C). This technique was used to measure the temperature in an optical engine and it gave reasonable temperature maps.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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