Abstract

Compared to pulse detonation engine and rotating detonation engine, oblique detonation engine has the advantage of higher flight Mach number. However, it is still challenging to achieve stabilized oblique detonation wave for a broad range of flight conditions. To control oblique detonation wave, this study focuses on the oblique detonation wave structure evolution induced by changing the wedge angle. Transient two-dimensional simulations are conducted for wedge-stabilized oblique detonation wave in a stoichiometric hydrogen/air mixture. The detailed chemistry of hydrogen combustion is considered, and the thermal states of the reactants are determined by the specified flight altitude and the Mach number. The angle change between inflow and wedge can be achieved in two ways: inflow-angle change with fixed wedge angle and wedge-angle change with fixed inflow direction. Results indicate that no new autoignition zone exists in the transient wave evolution caused by wedge-angle change, which is different from that of inflow-angle change observed in previous studies. For the wedge-angle change process, the effects of wedge-angle change rate on transient oblique detonation wave structure evolution are further assessed. It is found that the transient oblique detonation wave structure is more sensitive to the wedge-rotation angular velocity for increasing wedge angle (controlled by the thermodynamic properties of the mixture) than that for decreasing wedge angle (controlled by the shock wave dynamic). For the quasi-steady triple-wave structure during wedge-angle decreasing process, a normal detonation wave occurs and becomes dominant in the wave structure evolution, whose formation mechanism is analyzed by the polar curve theory.

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