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The electron beam diagnostic of the clustered supersonic nitrogen jets. / Avtaeva, S. V.; Yakovleva, T. S.; Kalyada, V. V. et al.

In: Journal of Physics: Conference Series, Vol. 927, No. 1, 012005, 23.11.2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Avtaeva, SV, Yakovleva, TS, Kalyada, VV & Zarvin, AE 2017, 'The electron beam diagnostic of the clustered supersonic nitrogen jets', Journal of Physics: Conference Series, vol. 927, no. 1, 012005. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/927/1/012005

APA

Avtaeva, S. V., Yakovleva, T. S., Kalyada, V. V., & Zarvin, A. E. (2017). The electron beam diagnostic of the clustered supersonic nitrogen jets. Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 927(1), [012005]. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/927/1/012005

Vancouver

Avtaeva SV, Yakovleva TS, Kalyada VV, Zarvin AE. The electron beam diagnostic of the clustered supersonic nitrogen jets. Journal of Physics: Conference Series. 2017 Nov 23;927(1):012005. doi: 10.1088/1742-6596/927/1/012005

Author

Avtaeva, S. V. ; Yakovleva, T. S. ; Kalyada, V. V. et al. / The electron beam diagnostic of the clustered supersonic nitrogen jets. In: Journal of Physics: Conference Series. 2017 ; Vol. 927, No. 1.

BibTeX

@article{a54df0945a7c4314acb9ad1c00043e42,
title = "The electron beam diagnostic of the clustered supersonic nitrogen jets",
abstract = "Axial and radial distributions of the rotational temperature and density of N2 molecules in supersonic nitrogen jets formed with conic nozzles (critical diameters dcr of 0.17 and 0.21 mm) were studied using the electron beam fluorescence technique at stagnation pressures P0 of 0.1-0.6 MPa. A rotational temperature Tr , equaling a gas temperature Tg owing to fast RT relaxation, was obtained using the rotational line relative intensity distribution in (0-1) vibrational band of the N2 first negative system. Gas density profiles in the jets were obtained using the integral intensity of the band. It is found, Tr at the nozzle outlet is of the order of a few tens of Kelvin and at further expansion Tr drops up to 15-20K at distance of (100-200) dcr . The gas temperature and density distributions in the studied supersonic nitrogen jets are not similar to the isentropic distributions. It is shown that the lower is the stagnation pressure the faster the gas density and temperature decrease with distance from the nozzle. Increase in P0 leads to elevating Tg in the jets. A reason for this effect may be cluster formation in the jets. Estimations of cluster mean sizes in the jets using Hagena's parameter show presence of large clusters (M≥200) at P0 = 0.4-0.6 MPa.",
keywords = "TEMPERATURE, FLOWS, GAS",
author = "Avtaeva, {S. V.} and Yakovleva, {T. S.} and Kalyada, {V. V.} and Zarvin, {A. E.}",
year = "2017",
month = nov,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1088/1742-6596/927/1/012005",
language = "English",
volume = "927",
journal = "Journal of Physics: Conference Series",
issn = "1742-6588",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The electron beam diagnostic of the clustered supersonic nitrogen jets

AU - Avtaeva, S. V.

AU - Yakovleva, T. S.

AU - Kalyada, V. V.

AU - Zarvin, A. E.

PY - 2017/11/23

Y1 - 2017/11/23

N2 - Axial and radial distributions of the rotational temperature and density of N2 molecules in supersonic nitrogen jets formed with conic nozzles (critical diameters dcr of 0.17 and 0.21 mm) were studied using the electron beam fluorescence technique at stagnation pressures P0 of 0.1-0.6 MPa. A rotational temperature Tr , equaling a gas temperature Tg owing to fast RT relaxation, was obtained using the rotational line relative intensity distribution in (0-1) vibrational band of the N2 first negative system. Gas density profiles in the jets were obtained using the integral intensity of the band. It is found, Tr at the nozzle outlet is of the order of a few tens of Kelvin and at further expansion Tr drops up to 15-20K at distance of (100-200) dcr . The gas temperature and density distributions in the studied supersonic nitrogen jets are not similar to the isentropic distributions. It is shown that the lower is the stagnation pressure the faster the gas density and temperature decrease with distance from the nozzle. Increase in P0 leads to elevating Tg in the jets. A reason for this effect may be cluster formation in the jets. Estimations of cluster mean sizes in the jets using Hagena's parameter show presence of large clusters (M≥200) at P0 = 0.4-0.6 MPa.

AB - Axial and radial distributions of the rotational temperature and density of N2 molecules in supersonic nitrogen jets formed with conic nozzles (critical diameters dcr of 0.17 and 0.21 mm) were studied using the electron beam fluorescence technique at stagnation pressures P0 of 0.1-0.6 MPa. A rotational temperature Tr , equaling a gas temperature Tg owing to fast RT relaxation, was obtained using the rotational line relative intensity distribution in (0-1) vibrational band of the N2 first negative system. Gas density profiles in the jets were obtained using the integral intensity of the band. It is found, Tr at the nozzle outlet is of the order of a few tens of Kelvin and at further expansion Tr drops up to 15-20K at distance of (100-200) dcr . The gas temperature and density distributions in the studied supersonic nitrogen jets are not similar to the isentropic distributions. It is shown that the lower is the stagnation pressure the faster the gas density and temperature decrease with distance from the nozzle. Increase in P0 leads to elevating Tg in the jets. A reason for this effect may be cluster formation in the jets. Estimations of cluster mean sizes in the jets using Hagena's parameter show presence of large clusters (M≥200) at P0 = 0.4-0.6 MPa.

KW - TEMPERATURE

KW - FLOWS

KW - GAS

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85037710962&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1088/1742-6596/927/1/012005

DO - 10.1088/1742-6596/927/1/012005

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85037710962

VL - 927

JO - Journal of Physics: Conference Series

JF - Journal of Physics: Conference Series

SN - 1742-6588

IS - 1

M1 - 012005

ER -

ID: 9069886