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Radiation of gases

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Koarle

Materials
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Jun 30, 2006
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Hello,

I am modelling radiation of a combustion reaction in an industrial furnace. The flame contains besides regular gas species (CO, CO2, H2O, N2,...) also a lot of ash (mainly Zinc oxide) and other more exotic gas species (Zn(g), PbO(g!!)). The temperatures of the flame are around 1600 °C.

I have the following questions about this problem:
-Will N2 radiate at these temperatures, or is it a good approximation to neglect the contribution of this? (where can I find a good reference on this?)
-How can I estimate radiation behavior of PbO(g) and calculate its Planck mean absorption coefficient? I guess I can estimate the eigenfrequency of the molecule if I think of it as a spring, but how do I proceed then to calculate the Planck mean aborption coefficient?

Any help on one of these questions would be highly welcome.

Best regards,

Karel Verscheure
 
Karel,

Try the text books by Siegel and Howell ( "Thermal radiation heat transfer" based on NASA research) and by Mike Modest ( Penn State University)"radiative heat trasfer".
 
Hello Davefitz,

I have the book of Michael Modest but this doesn't solve my problem: how can I estimate how much this PbO will radiate? I think I would be able to calculate the eigenfrequency of the molecule if I would know the spring constant, but how do I estimate the spring constant??
If I know the eigenfrequency of the molecule, how do I proceed then to calculate the Planck mean absorption coefficient k_p of the PbO gas?

Thanks in advance for your kind help,

Karel
 
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