论文标题
使用调制光热辐射测定法测量散装和涂料的高温热物理特性
Measurement of High-temperature Thermophysical Properties of Bulk and Coatings Using Modulated Photothermal Radiometry
论文作者
论文摘要
本文介绍了使用调制光热辐射法(MPR)方法测量体积和涂层高温导热性的仪器的发展,其中通过强度调节激光加热样品以探测样品的不同层。尽管MPR先前已经建立,但以前的大多数研究都只关注室温下的测量。在高温下,对MPR的测量尚未得到很好的研究,这些测量对于多种应用,例如浓缩太阳能(CSP)植物和核反应堆中使用的材料越来越重要。 MPR是一种非接触技术,它利用样品的固有热发射用于温度,这有利于在恶劣环境中高温下测量。作者设计和利用了适用于高温测量的样品持有人,最高为973 K,在样品中温度均匀。高温MPR设置通过测量具有已知导热率的大量材料来验证。然后将设置和技术扩展到通过调节激光加热光束的频率和热穿透深度的频率,将其在各种底物上厚度为10至50μm的黑色太阳能涂层进行测量。研究表明,典型的太阳能涂层的热电导率为0.4〜0.8 w m-1 k-1,表明在高太阳辐射通量下涂层内的温度下降可能较大,例如CSP工厂中的中央太阳能塔超过1000 sun。
This paper presents the development of instrumentation for the measurement of high-temperature thermal conductivity of bulk and coatings using a modulated photothermal radiometry (MPR) method, where a sample is heated by an intensity-modulated laser to probe into different layers of the sample. While MPR has been previously established, most of the previous studies only focus on the measurement at room temperature. The MPR has not been well studied for measurements of bulk and coating materials at high temperatures, which are increasingly important for a multitude of applications, such as materials used in the concentrating solar power (CSP) plants and the nuclear reactors. MPR is a non-contact technique that utilizes the intrinsic thermal emission from the specimens for thermometry, which is favorable for measurements at high temperatures in harsh environment. The authors designed and utilized a sample holder suitable for high temperature measurement up to 973 K with good temperature uniformity within the sample. The high-temperature MPR setup was validated by measuring bulk materials with known thermal conductivity. The setup and technique were then extended to the measurement of black solar-absorbing coatings of 10 to 50 μm thick on various substrates by modulating the frequency of the laser heating beam and the thermal penetration depth. The studies showed that thermal conductivities of typical solar-absorbing coatings are 0.4 ~ 0.8 W m-1 K-1, indicating a possibly large temperature drop within the coating under high solar irradiation flux, such as over 1000-sun for central solar towers in CSP plants.