Degradation Characterization of Unsteady Pressure-Sensitive Paint Under Various Pressures
The lifetime and intensity techniques are two distinct methods used to measure the surface pressure of wind tunnel models with pressure-sensitive paint (PSP). When exposed to 405 nm light for extended periods, both the luminescence and the lifetime ratio were observed to decrease, affecting perceive...
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Zusammenfassung: | The lifetime and intensity techniques are two distinct methods used to measure the surface pressure of wind tunnel models with pressure-sensitive paint (PSP). When exposed to 405 nm light for extended periods, both the luminescence and the lifetime ratio were observed to decrease, affecting perceived pressure values. To help further the implementation of the uPSP, this paper describes the efforts to characterize the degradation of both the intensity of the paint and its lifetime ratio, as well as the change in intensity calibration. It was found that the paint degrades at different rates depending on the partial pressure of oxygen during excitation. It was also found that the calibration curves exhibit greater changes when under higher oxygen concentrations, both indicating photodegradation due to photodecomposition and photo-oxidation processes. These effects are observed on models in a subsonic 14” × 14” wind tunnel. The work provides insight into the dynamic degradation behavior of PSP and uPSP, paving the way to reduce the error in pressure measurements obtained through these techniques. |
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