1 research outputs found
Photoacoustic hygrometer for icing wind tunnel water content measurement: design, analysis and intercomparison
This work describes the latest design, calibration and application of a near-infrared laser diode-based photoacoustic (PA) hygrometer developed for total water content measurement in simulated atmospheric freezing precipitation and high ice water content conditions with relevance in fundamental icing research, aviation testing, and certification. The single-wavelength and single-pass PA absorption cell is calibrated for molar water vapor fractions with a two-pressure humidity generator integrated into the instrument. Laboratory calibration showed an estimated measurement accuracy better than 3.3β% in the water vapor mole fraction range of 510β12β360βppm (5β% from 250β21β200βppm) with a theoretical limit of detection (3Ο) of 3.2βppm. The hygrometer is examined in combination with a basic isokinetic evaporator probe (IKP) and sampling system designed for icing wind tunnel applications, for which a general description of total condensed water content (CWC) measurements and uncertainties are presented. Despite the current limitation of the IKP to a hydrometeor mass flux below 90βgm-2s, a CWC measurement accuracy better than 20β% is achieved by the instrument above a CWC of 0.14βgβmβ3 in cold air (β30ββC) with suitable background humidity measurement. Results of a comparison to the Cranfield University IKP instrument in freezing drizzle and rain show a CWC agreement of the two instruments within 20β%, which demonstrates the potential of PA hygrometers for water content measurement in atmospheric icing condition