Abstract
A subscale flight experiment configuration propelled by a Mach 8 supersonic combustion ramjet (scramjet) was designed within the framework of the European Commission co-funded Long Term Advanced Propulsion Concepts and Technologies II project. The focus of this design exercise was to verify by ground testing the ability of the proposed scramjet engine to produce adequate thrust for hypersonic level flight. Experiments performed in DLR’s High Enthalpy Shock Tunnel Göttingen confirmed precedent CFD predictions of the total thrust and demonstrated the operability of the vehicle. Yet, significant discrepancies between the CFD analyses, which were performed to design the vehicle, and subsequent detailed measurements of the pressure distribution in the combustor were observed and could not be resolved so far. This paper focuses on a further analysis of these residual discrepancies. It was found that the CFD predictions of the combustor pressure distribution are sensitive to the configuration of the intake boundary layer. Particularly, different assumptions for the location of the laminar to turbulent boundary layer transition strongly influence cross-flow structures which develop on the intake and which are able to trigger different combustion modes in the combustor. While the effect on total vehicle performance remains limited, a significant impact on the structure and magnitude of the surface pressure distribution was observed. i.e., the large combustor peak pressures, which occur in the experiment, can be explained by the occurrence of a strong shock train in the vicinity of the combustor wall.
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