Abstract

A continuous detonation engine with various exhaust nozzles, analogous to typical scramjet cavity combustors with variable rear-wall heights, was adopted to perform a succession of cylindrical air-breathing continuous rotating detonation experiments fueled by a non-premixed ethylene/air mixture. The results show that the detonation combustion was observed to self-sustain in the combustor through simultaneous high-speed imaging covering the combustor and isolator. A long test, lasting more than three seconds, was performed in this unique configuration, indicating that the cylindrical isolator–combustor engine exhibits potential for practical applications. Three distinct combustion modes were revealed with varied equivalent ratios (hybrid mode, sawtooth wave mode, and deflagration mode). The diameter of the nozzle throat was critical in the formation of rotating detonation waves. When the nozzle throat diameter was larger than the specific value, the detonation wave could not form and self-sustain. The upstream boundary of the shock train was supposed to be close to the isolator entrance in conditions of a high equivalence ratio and small nozzle throat diameter. In addition, it was verified that periodic high-frequency pressure oscillation could cause substantial impacts on the incoming flow as compared with the steady deflagration with the same combustor pressure.

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