Publication | Closed Access
An Analytical and Experimental Study of Supersonic Combustion of Hydrogen in Vitiated Air Stream
183
Citations
11
References
1973
Year
EngineeringCombustion EngineeringExperimental ThermodynamicsGas-liquid FlowIn-cylinder FlowThermodynamicsProbe MeasurementsWall Boundary LayerVitiated Air StreamHydrogenHeat TransferMultiphase FlowSupersonic CombustionHydrogen InjectionHydrogen TransitionAerospace EngineeringCombustion ScienceExperimental StudyHydrogen CombustionThermal Engineering
Detailed probe measurements of total temperature, pressure, and composition were taken in a two-dimensional test section 35.6 cm downstream of hydrogen injection. A high pressure gas generator supplied Mach 2.44 vitiated air or inert gas at elevated temperatures and at a static pressure equal to that of the hydrogen. Special water-cooled probes and sampling techniques were developed for the short test times required by heat-sink hardware. Independent methods of measuring stream total temperatures are compared. For the pure mixing case, the computed composition profile agreed well with the experimental profile. The analysis takes into account the wall boundary layer and the initial boundary layer in the main stream. Ignition of hydrogen, as determined from photographic exposures of the radiating gases, varied from 30 to 10 cm downstream from injection for a 45 K increase in local free-stream static temperature.
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