\documentclass[10pt,a4paper]{article} \usepackage[margin=18mm]{geometry} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{siunitx} \usepackage{graphicx} \title{\vspace{-1.0cm}Optical Chemiluminescence Diagnostics for Syngas Composition and Combustion State} \author{Robin Clark} \date{} \begin{document} \maketitle \vspace{-0.8cm} \section*{Abstract} This note proposes a non-intrusive optical method for assessing syngas composition and combustion quality using flame chemiluminescence. By observing emission from excited radicals (OH*, CH*, and C$_2$), it is possible to infer air--fuel ratio, combustion stability, and the presence of carbon-rich species. The approach is intended as a fast, low-cost diagnostic layer rather than a replacement for conventional gas analysis. The concept is well suited to structured investigation as a PhD topic. \section*{1. Motivation} Syngas composition varies significantly depending on feedstock and gasifier conditions, typically comprising mixtures of H$_2$, CO, CH$_4$, CO$_2$, and N$_2$. Conventional measurement techniques (e.g. NDIR, TCD, lambda probes) are often: \begin{itemize} \item intrusive or require gas sampling, \item relatively slow, \item costly in industrial environments. \end{itemize} There is therefore value in a real-time, in-situ diagnostic method based on combustion behaviour. \section*{2. Principle} During combustion, short-lived excited radicals emit light at characteristic wavelengths: \begin{center} \begin{tabular}{l l l} \textbf{Species} & \textbf{Wavelength} & \textbf{Interpretation} \\ \hline OH* & $\sim$310 nm & Oxidation zone / flame front \\ CH* & $\sim$430 nm & Hydrocarbon breakdown \\ C$_2$ (Swan bands) & $\sim$516 nm & C--C chemistry / soot precursors\\ \end{tabular} \end{center} These emissions arise from reaction~kinetics and flame~chemistry rather than bulk temperature alone, making them sensitive to both mixture and fuel composition. \section*{3. Core Measurement Concept} The approach is based on measuring intensity ratios: \begin{align} R_1 &= \frac{\text{OH}^*}{\text{CH}^*} \quad \text{(air--fuel ratio)} \\ R_2 &= \frac{\text{C}_2^*}{\text{CH}^*} \quad \text{(hydrocarbon richness)} \\ R_3 &= \frac{\text{C}_2^*}{\text{OH}^*} \quad \text{(soot tendency)} \end{align} In addition, temporal behaviour provides diagnostic information: \begin{itemize} \item Standard deviation of OH* intensity $\rightarrow$ flame stability \item Cross-correlation between bands $\rightarrow$ regime transitions \end{itemize} \section*{4. Role of C$_2$ Chemiluminescence} The inclusion of C$_2$ (Swan bands) is key to extending the method beyond conventional OH*/CH* sensing.~\footnote{C$_2$ chemiluminescence (Swan bands, $\sim$516~nm) is typically observed in fuel-rich or locally oxygen-limited regions of hydrocarbon flames. In these conditions, oxidation of carbon fragments is inhibited and radical recombination pathways dominate, leading to formation of C$_2$ via reactions such as C + CH $\rightarrow$ C$_2$ + H. Excited C$_2^*$ species emit banded radiation as they relax, producing the characteristic green Swan bands. The presence of C$_2$ is therefore indicative of carbon--carbon bond formation and is closely associated with the early stages of soot precursor development.} \subsection*{4.1 Physical Significance} C$_2$ emission is associated with: \begin{itemize} \item presence of C--C bonds, \item locally fuel-rich regions, \item formation of soot precursors. \end{itemize} \subsection*{4.2 Diagnostic Value} \begin{center} \begin{tabular}{l c c c l} \textbf{Condition} & OH & CH & C$_2$ & \textbf{Interpretation} \\ \hline H$_2$-rich gas & High & Low & $\approx$0 & Clean combustion \\ CO/H$_2$ mix & Moderate & Low & $\approx$0 & Typical syngas \\ CH$_4$ present & Moderate & High & Low--mod & Methane content \\ Heavy HC / tar & Lower & High & High & Soot risk / contamination \\ \end{tabular} \end{center} Thus, C$_2$ provides sensitivity to carbon chemistry and enables discrimination between different syngas compositions. \section*{5. Additional Spectral Features} Other emissions of potential interest include: \begin{itemize} \item CN bands ($\sim$388 nm): nitrogen-containing species \item Na/K lines ($\sim$589 nm): contaminants or ash \item Continuum emission: soot radiation and incomplete combustion \end{itemize} A multi-band or spectrally resolved approach may allow further discrimination using statistical or machine learning techniques. \section*{6. Implementation} A practical system could consist of: \begin{itemize} \item Photodiodes with narrow bandpass filters (310 nm, 430 nm, 516 nm) \item Transimpedance amplifiers (TIA front-end) \item ADC and embedded processing (e.g. STM32 class device) \end{itemize} Signal processing would include averaging, ratio calculation, and temporal analysis. \section*{7. Applications} Potential applications include: \begin{itemize} \item Gasifier monitoring \item Industrial burner optimisation \item Detection of: \begin{itemize} \item flame instability, \item soot formation, \item poor mixing or fuel variation, \item inference of calorific value (subject to calibration against gas composition) \end{itemize} \end{itemize} \section*{8. Research Opportunity} Key open questions suitable for PhD investigation include: \begin{itemize} \item Calibration of optical signals against known gas compositions \item Sensitivity to temperature and pressure variations \item Robustness under optical fouling \item Extension to spectrally resolved measurement \end{itemize} \section*{9. Conclusion} Multi-band chemiluminescence sensing offers a promising route to fast, non-intrusive diagnostics for syngas combustion. The addition of C$_2$ emission provides a potentially valuable link to fuel composition, extending the method beyond simple air--fuel ratio measurement. The concept warrants structured experimental validation and is well suited to academic--industrial collaboration. \section*{10. Proposed Work (Outline)} \begin{itemize} \item Controlled combustion experiments with known gas mixtures \item Multi-band optical measurement and calibration \item Development of regression models for composition and calorific value \item Validation under real-world conditions (optical fouling, turbulence) \end{itemize} \end{document}