The design, validation, and application of a
quantum-cascade-laser-absorption-spectroscopy diagnostic for measuring
gas temperature, pressure, and nitric oxide (NO) in high-temperature
air are presented. A distributed-feedback quantum-cascade laser (QCL)
centered near
1976
c
m
−
1
was used to scan across two
transitions of NO in its ground electronic state (
X
2
Π
1
/
2
). A measurement rate of
500 kHz was achieved using a single QCL by: (1) performing
current modulation through a bias-tee, and (2) targeting closely
spaced transitions with a large difference in lower-state energy. The
diagnostic was validated in a mixture of 95% argon and 5% NO, which
was shock-heated to
≈
2000
to 3700 K. The average mean
percent differences between laser-absorption-spectroscopy (LAS)
measurements and predictions from shock-jump relations for
temperature, pressure, and NO mole fraction were 3.1%, 4.1%, and 6.5%,
respectively. The diagnostic was then applied to characterize
shock-heated air at high temperatures (up to
≈
5500
K
) and high pressures (up to
12 atm) behind either incident or reflected shocks. The LAS
measurements were compared to theoretical predictions from shock-jump
relations, pressure sensors mounted in the wall of the shock tube, and
equilibrium values of the NO mole fraction. The average mean percent
differences between LAS measurements and their aforementioned
reference values were 3.2%, 10.8%, and 10.4% for temperature,
pressure, and NO mole fraction, respectively. Last, a comparison
between a measured NO mole fraction time history and a time-stepped
homogeneous reactor simulation performed using two different chemical
kinetics mechanisms is presented.
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