Abstract

Small perturbations of a choked flow through a thin annular nozzle are investigated. Two cases are considered, corresponding to a ‘choked outlet’ and a ‘choked inlet’ respectively. For the first case, either an acoustic or entropy or vorticity wave is assumed to be travelling downstream towards the nozzle contraction. An asymptotic analysis for low frequency is used to find the reflected acoustic wave that is created. The boundary condition found by Marble & Candel (1977) for a compact choked nozzle is shown to apply to first order, even for circumferentially varying waves. The next-order correction can be expressed as an ‘effective length’ dependent on the mean flow (and hence the particular geometry of the nozzle) in a quantifiable way.For the second case, an acoustic wave propagates upstream and is reflected from a convergent–divergent nozzle. A normal shock is assumed to be present. By considering the interaction of the shock's position and flow perturbations, the reflected propagating waves are found for a compact nozzle. It is shown that a significant entropy disturbance is produced even when the shock is weak, and that for circumferential modes a vorticity wave is also present. Numerical calculations are conducted using a sample geometry and good agreement with the analysis is found at low frequency in both cases, and the range of validity of the asymptotic theory is determined.

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