TY - GEN
T1 - Numerical investigation of upstream cavity enhanced combustion in a scramjet combustor
AU - Roos, Tim
AU - Pudsey, Adrian S.
AU - Bricalli, Mathew G.
AU - Ogawa, Hideaki
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Inc, AIAA. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Cavities are widely used for flame-holding and ignition enhancement in scramjet engines. When used for this purpose the fuel injectors are commonly placed some distance upstream of or inside the cavity to allow entrainment of fuel into the cavity. Few efforts have investigated placement of the cavity upstream of the fuel injector, an arrangement which facilitates interaction between the cavity flowfield and the jet interaction around the injector. This study extends an earlier study on the mixing behaviour of a number of upstream cavity geometries to examine the combustion performance of these arrangements. Eight cavity geometries with length-to-depth (L/D) ratios ranging from 2.5-30 are numerically compared to a no-cavity baseline case for three thermal boundary conditions (isothermal 300K, isothermal 1800K and adiabatic), using hydrogen as fuel. The cavity geometries are found to increase combustion efficiency by up to 8%, with the increase larger at lower wall temperature conditions. The L/D = 15 cavity was found to perform well for all wall temperatures, while the performance of the L/D = 30 cavity varied the most with wall temperature. In addition, total pressure loss is seen to be very similar for the baseline and cavity cases, contrary to the trend observed when chemically frozen fuel was used. The flame center of mass is also farther away from the wall for the cavity cases, reducing wall temperature in the farfield. Wall heat flux was observed to increase near the cavity wall however, likely due to combustion in the cavity wall boundary layer. The study shows that the combustion performance trends are largely similar to the mixing performance trends, with the L/D = 15 and L/D = 30 cavities having the best and most temperature-dependent performance, respectively.
AB - Cavities are widely used for flame-holding and ignition enhancement in scramjet engines. When used for this purpose the fuel injectors are commonly placed some distance upstream of or inside the cavity to allow entrainment of fuel into the cavity. Few efforts have investigated placement of the cavity upstream of the fuel injector, an arrangement which facilitates interaction between the cavity flowfield and the jet interaction around the injector. This study extends an earlier study on the mixing behaviour of a number of upstream cavity geometries to examine the combustion performance of these arrangements. Eight cavity geometries with length-to-depth (L/D) ratios ranging from 2.5-30 are numerically compared to a no-cavity baseline case for three thermal boundary conditions (isothermal 300K, isothermal 1800K and adiabatic), using hydrogen as fuel. The cavity geometries are found to increase combustion efficiency by up to 8%, with the increase larger at lower wall temperature conditions. The L/D = 15 cavity was found to perform well for all wall temperatures, while the performance of the L/D = 30 cavity varied the most with wall temperature. In addition, total pressure loss is seen to be very similar for the baseline and cavity cases, contrary to the trend observed when chemically frozen fuel was used. The flame center of mass is also farther away from the wall for the cavity cases, reducing wall temperature in the farfield. Wall heat flux was observed to increase near the cavity wall however, likely due to combustion in the cavity wall boundary layer. The study shows that the combustion performance trends are largely similar to the mixing performance trends, with the L/D = 15 and L/D = 30 cavities having the best and most temperature-dependent performance, respectively.
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U2 - 10.2514/6.2020-2429
DO - 10.2514/6.2020-2429
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85087876167
SN - 9781624106002
T3 - 23rd AIAA International Space Planes and Hypersonic Systems and Technologies Conference, 2020
BT - 23rd AIAA International Space Planes and Hypersonic Systems and Technologies Conference, 2020
PB - American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Inc, AIAA
T2 - 23rd AIAA International Space Planes and Hypersonic Systems and Technologies Conference, 2020
Y2 - 10 March 2020 through 12 March 2020
ER -