Abstract

Thermal protection of hypersonic vehicles is of great concern during ascent and re-entry conditions due to higher aerothermal loads. The passive forward-facing cavity is exhibited a substantial reduction of aero heating effects. The experimental studies on unsteady aspects of the flow considering the cavity geometries and heat transfer effects within the cavity are not abundant. In the present study, we investigated the heat transfer variations and nature of shock around a blunt body with cylindrical and parabolic cavity geometries. Experiments are conducted in hypersonic shock tunnels using air as the test gas for flow enthalpy conditions of 3.2 and 5.4 MJ/kg for a free-stream Mach number of 10.9 and 10.2 respectively. The cavity flow is established by verifying the measured heat flux, pressure, and shock oscillation results. The unsteady heat flux measurements and high-speed schlieren imaging is performed to study the effects. The results reveal that the flow with the parabolic cavity geometry shows a significant increase in the mean shock standoff position of about 14% and 30% compared to the blunt-nosed body, and about 7%–18% compared to the cylindrical cavity geometry, with a reduction of bow shock oscillations. As a result, a substantial reduction of heat flux about 34%–59% on the nose surface is noticed and found it is effective for mitigating the aerodynamic heating at higher flow enthalpy conditions. The flow with a cylindrical cavity geometry indicated the substantial increase in the heat flux due to the shock interaction and the significant heat flux variation in the cavity region is recognized and observed that such effects were not prevalent with the parabolic cavity geometry.

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