Publication | Open Access
Investigation of Vaporized Kerosene Injection and Combustion in a Supersonic Model Combustor
123
Citations
34
References
2006
Year
EngineeringCombustion TheoryFuel ScienceGas Turbine CombustionCombustion EngineeringVaporized Kerosene InjectionTurbulent FlamePropulsionHeat TransferMultiphase FlowDelivery SystemSupersonic CombustionFuel Flow ControlHeterogeneous CombustionVaporized KeroseneSupersonic Model CombustorAerospace EngineeringCombustion ScienceThermal Engineering
Injection and combustion of vaporized kerosene was experimentally investigated in a Mach 2.5 model combustor at various fuel temperatures and injection pressures. A unique kerosene heating and delivery system, which can prepare heated kerosene up to 820 K at a pressure of 5.5 MPa with negligible fuel coking, was developed. A three-species surrogate was employed to simulate the thermophysical properties of kerosene. The calculated thermophysical properties of surrogate provided insight into the fuel flow control in experiments. Kerosene jet structures at various preheat temperatures injecting into both quiescent environment and a Mach 2.5 crossflow were characterized. It was shown that the use ofvaporized kerosene injection holds the potential of enhancing fuel-air mixing and promoting overall burning. Supersonic combustion tests further confirmed the preceding conjecture by comparing the combustor performances of supercritical kerosene with those of liquid kerosene and effervescent atomization with hydrogen barbotage. Under the similar flow conditions and overall kerosene equivalence ratios, experimental results illustrated that the combustion efficiency of supercritical kerosene increased approximately 10-15% over that of liquid kerosene, which was comparable to that of effervescent atomization.
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