Abstract
The mixing process of extremely underexpanded supercritical jets into a gaseous environment is studied. The focus lies on the influence of the nonideal fluid behavior on the mixing process. Numerical simulations are conducted for eight different injection conditions where experimental sound speed measurements are available. Overall, a very good agreement between simulations and experiments is found. A comparison of the real-gas and the ideal-gas closures shows the necessity to account for nonideal fluid behavior. The application of the ideal-gas law results in an incorrect energetic state which most prominently leads to an overestimation of the post-shock temperature by 70 K. The wrong energetic state yields erroneous thermodynamic properties in the mixing region. Finally, a mixture model is deduced enabling the prediction of mixture properties. As independent measurements of mass/mole fractions are not available, this evaluation procedure is a first attempt to numerically predict the mixture composition in underexpanded jets.
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