Abstract

This paper describes an experimental study investigating unsteady combustion regimes in a kerosene-fueled scramjet. The results are obtained under inflow conditions of a 2.9 MPa stagnation pressure, 1900 K stagnation temperature, and a Mach number of 3.0. The air throttling position is 240 mm downstream of the combustor entrance, with an air throttling flow rate (ratio of air throttling mass flux to inflow mass flux) of 38% and a fuel equivalence ratio of 0.37. Combustion is relatively stable when air throttling is applied and is dominated by auto-ignition. When air throttling is turned off, the combustion becomes more unsteady and is dominated by flame propagation. At the same time, the combustion mode changes, and the frequency of the combustion mode transition is 286 Hz. Schlieren images and one-dimension analysis show that the effect of air throttling is the coupling of cold throat (aerodynamic throat) and hot throat (thermal throat). The proper orthogonal decomposition and dynamic mode decomposition analysis present that when air throttling is applied or removed, the frequencies of injector–flame feedback are almost the same, while the frequencies of shock–flame feedback exhibit considerable variation, which is caused by the location of the precombustion shock affected by air throttling.

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