Abstract

A Mach 2, hydrogen-air combustor with an unswept 10-deg ramp fuel injector was experimentally and numerically studied for a simulated flight Mach number near 5. Numerical modeling was performed using the Viscous Upwind Algorithm for Complex Flow Analysis code, and results were compared against experimental wall-pressure distributions, fuel plume images, and fuel plume velocity measurements. The model matched wall-pressure distributions well for the case of fuel-off and fuel-air mixing. For a fuel-air reacting case, pressure was matched well in the upstream third of the duct. Downstream, however, the pressure rise as a result of combustion was underpredicted. Based on the fuel plume imaging and velocity measurements, fuel plume shape was matched well for both the mixing and reacting cases. However, plume size, penetration, and centerplane axial growth were generally underpredicted by the model. The full extent of the velocity reduction caused by thermal choking was also not predicted. Despite these findings, the numerical model performed better than a previous model developed by the investigators. It was proposed that differences between the present numerical model and experiment stemmed from numerical underprediction of fuel-air turbulent mixing, and this resulted in underprediction of heat release.

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