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6 was slightly opened to let it escape. A hotplate was set to C and the vial was placed on top of the hotplate. All of the feedthroughs were plugged to prevent ambient air from entering the box. Five milliliters of TEAB from
Sigma-Aldrich was used for both of these tests. The sample in dry air was kept in the box for 7 days and the sample in nitrogen is kept in the box for 14 days.
B. Hypertester The Hypertester is a modular platform used to conduct hypergolic drop-on-pool tests. The original system was based on earlier work at China Lake.
Gradually, the system has been improved to include more instrumentation. Prior to this study, the Hypertester included an impact sensor to record the moment of droplet impact and a photodiode to measure when ignition occurs. For this test campaign, a piezoelectric diaphragm is used as the impact sensor and a Thorlabs DET10A photodiode is used to record light released from the reaction. In addition to these standard measurement devices, the Hypertester
is outfitted with a microphone, a high speed video camera, and a spectrometer/streak camera combination. The microphone is a PCB Piezotronics B prepolarized free-field microphone. Video is recorded with a Vision Research Phantom v camera from 5000 fps to 20 000 fps depending on the test. A grid of white-light LEDs is used to illuminate the falling drops. The spectrometer is a Princeton Instruments PI-ACTON SP spectrometer using a grating of 600 g/mm at a 300 nm blaze angle. The spectrometer divides the light signal vertically by wavelength and the light is passed to a Sydor Instruments Ross 2000 streak camera. The streak camera sweeps the incoming light signal horizontally across a
1360 by 1024 pixel CCD sensor. The resulting D image maps light intensity by time and wavelength. At the grating used, the vertical direction resolves 0.093 nm per pixel. Tests were conducted with a 30 ms nominal sweep time producing a resolution of 25 s per pixel. A more detailed description of this setup is described by Dennis To provide the light
signal to the spectrometer, a Thorlabs UM Solarization-Resistant Multimode fiber optic cable runs from the test article to the spectrometer inlet. A collimating lens is used to reduce the capture area of the fiber to a 3 mm diameter beam with the bottom edge of the beam contacting the top of the crucible on the opposite side of the lens. The oxidizer pool is contained in a polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) crucible with interior diameter of 0.44 in and a depth of 0.13 in. The crucible sits on top of the impact sensor and is located in the same spot by four sliding plastic guides. Al syringe unloads drops of fuel 5 in above the crucible. Just below the syringe, an optical cage lines up a laser diode on one end with another DET10A photodiode on the other side. As the drop passes through the laser beam, the signal to the photodiode drops. This system is referred to as the laser interrupter. A delay generator reads the output from the laser interrupter to time signals going out to the streak camera,
the video camera, and the two high frequency data acquisition systems used to record the other instrumentation outputs. These trigger signals allow all of the data to be synchronized in time. A low frequency data acquisition system records the data from a T-type thermocouple and an Omega HX71 humidity meter. The Hypertester is contained within the same test article box used foraging TEAB in dry air and nitrogen environments. A PTFE rod goes through the box to actuate the syringe. The humidity meter sits inside the feedthrough below the PTFE rod. The top feedthrough on the right side connects to a household humidifier. The two ports below it are plugged with rubber stoppers and three cables are routed through the stoppers for the microphone and photodiode outputs. On the left side of the box, dry shop air is connected to one feedthrough. Two feedthroughs pass the wires for the laser, the impact sensor,
the optical fiber, and the thermocouple. The remaining ports are plugged. The test article is shown in Figure 3. Downloaded by PURDUE UNIVERSITY on July 21, 2017 | http://arc.aiaa.org | DOI: 10.2514/6.2015-3867
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