Abstract

Over the last 40 years, many solid and liquid rocket motors have experienced combustion instabilities. Among other causes, there is the interaction of acoustic modes with the combustion and/or fluid dynamic processes inside the combustion chamber. Studies have been showing that, even if less than 1% of the available energy is diverted to an acoustic mode, combustion instability can be generated. On one hand, this instability can lead to ballistic pressure changes, couple with other propulsion systems such as guidance or thrust vector control, and in the worst case, cause motor structural failure. In this case, measures, applying acoustic techniques, must be taken to correct/minimize these influences on the combustion. The combustion chamber acoustic behavior in operating conditions can be estimated by considering its behavior in room conditions. In this way, acoustic tests can be easily performed, thus identifying the cavity modes. This paper describes the procedures to characterize the acoustic behavior in the inner cavity of four different configurations of a combustion chamber. Simple analytical models are used to calculate the acoustic resonance frequencies and these results are compared with acoustic natural frequencies measured at room conditions. Some comments about the measurement procedures are done, as well as the next steps for the continuity of this research. The analytical and experimental procedures results showed good agreement. However, limitations on high frequency band as well as in the identification of specific kinds of modes indicate that numerical methods able to model the real cavity geometry and an acoustic experimental modal analysis may be necessary for a more complete analysis. Future works shall also consider the presence of passive acoustic devices such as baffles and resonators capable of introducing damping and avoiding or limiting acoustic instabilities.

Highlights

  • Combustion instabilities have been present in the development of liquid rocket engines (LRE) over the last decades

  • Resonant frequencies of the combustion chamber were identified by analyzing the registered Frequency Response Functions (FRF), which were measured along the cavity of the chamber

  • It is important to highlight that this frequency separation method can still be improved, once the simple theoretical versus experimental frequency comparison is not sufficiently accurate, considering that the mathematical model is a simple model of the acoustic cavity of the combustion chamber, with some approximations

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Summary

Introduction

Combustion instabilities have been present in the development of liquid rocket engines (LRE) over the last decades. There are basically three types of combustion instabilities in LRE: low frequency, medium frequency and high frequency. Called chugging, are caused by pressure interactions between the propellant feed system and the combustion chamber. Called buzzing, are due to coupling between the combustion process and the propellant feed system flow. The high frequency instabilities are the most potentially dangerous and not well-understood ones. It occurs due to coupling of the combustion process and the chamber acoustics (Sutton and Biblarz, 2001)

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