Further features and details of the present invention will be apparent from the description hereinafter of the embodiments by way of example of the invention, which are shown in the Figures in which:
This embodiment therefore provides that the laser resonator 4 is not arranged directly at the combustion chamber window. That has the advantage that the magnitude of the mechanical and thermal stresses is kept low. The transmission device for transmitting the laser light 5 to the combustion chamber window 7 in this embodiment includes both the optical waveguide 8 and also the lenses 9 and 10. It is however also possible to use any other transmission devices which are suitable for laser light and which are known in the state of the art. It will be appreciated that it is alternatively also possible for the laser light generating device 3 formed by the laser resonator 4 and the specified optical components to be arranged directly at the combustion chamber window 7′, that thereby affording a laser ignition arrangement which is overall highly integrated.
In a particularly preferred feature it is provided that the laser light generating device 3 introduces pulsed laser light 5 into the combustion chamber 11. In that case the pulse durations are desirably between 0.1 ns and 20 ns, preferably between 0.5 ns and 10 ns. In the case of pulsed laser light the levels of intensity specified in accordance with the invention are then desirably levels of energy intensity which are averaged in respect of time over the pulse duration. In that case the pulse duration can be defined as the period of time of a pulse, which is between the 50% values of the rising and falling pulse edges, with respect to the maximum amplitude. That definition is generally referred to as the full width at half maximum definition.
The laser light generating device 3 used can be for example Nd: YAG lasers which are known in the state of the art and which are pumped by means of flash lamps and which involve active Q-switching, with pulse durations of between 5 and 10 ns and laser energies of between 0 and 200 mJ, or diode-pumped passively Q-switched Nd: YAG lasers with pulse durations of between 0.5 and 5 ns and laser energies of between 0 and 20 mJ.
In the embodiments of laser ignition arrangements according to the invention as shown in
The following applies for the beam exit diameter:
D
1
=D
0
·X/F
As was found in accordance with the invention a decisive parameter in regard to keeping the combustion chamber window 7 or 7′ clean is the intensity or energy intensity I. That results from the quotient of laser energy E1 and the beam exit surface 12 at the surface of the combustion chamber window 7 or 7′ respectively, which is at the combustion chamber side:
I=4·E1/(D12·π)=4·E1·F2/(D02·X2·π).
Desirably the intensities I according to the invention are energy intensities which are averaged not only in respect of time but also in respect of space. In that respect, the expression intensity I which is averaged in respect of space is used to mean the intensity which is averaged over the beam exit surface 12 of the laser light beam 5. Calculation of the beam exit surface 12 is effected by way of the beam exit diameter D1. The beam exit diameter D1 can be calculated like any beam diameter from the optical data and the geometrical arrangement. Alternatively it is possible to use a beam profiler to measure the beam diameter or the effective beam area along the beam propagation direction in order in that way to extrapolate the beam exit diameter D1 or the beam exit surface 12 at the combustion chamber window 7 or 7′ respectively. In that respect reference is generally to be made to the definition of the Gaussian beam, for the definition of the beam diameter—as specifically also for the beam exit diameter D1. The beam diameter is defined as that value at which the power density [W/m2] falls to 1/e2 (≈13.5%) of the maximum value. The step of determining the energies E0 and E1 is effected by way of a commercially available pulse energy measuring device, for example a pyroelectric detector. Alternatively it is also possible to determine the energy intensity I which is averaged in respect of time, at the combustion chamber window 7 or 7′ respectively. For that purpose it is possible by means of a beam profiler to determine a beam profile which standardised with the pulse energy gives the absolute energy intensity profile.
The intensities I according to the invention can be achieved with various spatial intensity distributions. It is desirable if the intensity distribution is substantially constant over the beam diameter D1. That is generally assumed to be the case if—as shown in
Although a substantially rectangular intensity distribution as shown in
The concept according to the invention is suitable for the ignition of all fuel-air mixtures but in particular for methane-air mixtures in an air-fuel ratio λ of between about 1.5 and 2.5, preferably between 1.8 and 2.2.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| A 1334/2006 | Aug 2006 | AT | national |