Abstract

The combustor is the core component of the scramjet. The mixing of fuel and oxidizer is an important prerequisite for the efficient operation of the combustor. A thin strut configuration with supplemental oxygen at the trailing edge is proposed to enhance the mixing of fuel and oxidizer. In this paper, a series of large eddy simulations are carried out at the combustor inlet conditions of Ma = 2.8, Tt = 1680 K, and Pt = 1.87 MPa to optimize the fuel injection strategy and clarify how supplementation oxygen affects the mixing performance. The results show that injecting fuel from the upstream nozzle will form a more complex flow separation region and a stronger vortex, and increase the mixing efficiency from 0.18 to 0.26 compared with the downstream nozzle. The diffusion of fuel interacts strongly with vortexes. A unique separation zone was observed near the upstream nozzle for the first time. Compared with a single nozzle of fuel injection, the coordinated injection of two nozzles can increase the dimensionless fuel penetration depth by 30%. Supplementing oxygen at the trailing edge of the strut can significantly increase the turbulence to generate a variety of vortices and enhance the mixing of fuel and oxidizer, and the mixing efficiency can be increased by more than 20%.

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