Abstract

The mixing performance of an injector determines the combustion performance of a bipropellant rocket engine. In the previous study, a novel coaxial porous injector concept was developed to improve the mixing performance of a shear coaxial injector. It demonstrated a higher characteristic velocity efficiency than that of a typical shear coaxial injector. To clarify the efficiency-improving mechanism of a coaxial porous injector, the combustion flowfields of both injectors were visualized using a high-speed shadowgraph technique. The effect of geometry factors on the spray core length and the combustion performance as well as the differences in the reactive spray behavior between the coaxial porous injector and the shear coaxial injector were observed. The coaxial porous injector with a different wall-injection length showed higher characteristic velocity efficiencies, shorter spray core lengths, and thicker phase-change patterns at the spray core boundary. Changes in wall-injection length had a nonmonotonic effect on both the spray core length and the characteristic velocity efficiency. As opposed to the expected results, the coaxial porous injector with the highest combustion efficiency showed the longest spray core length. The phase-change pattern width, caused by the evaporation of liquid fuel droplets, was proportional to the efficiency.

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