Abstract

The steps necessary to achieve the strong coupling between a flowfield solver and a material response solver are presented. This type of coupling is required to accurately capture the complex aerothermodynamic physics occurring during hypersonic atmospheric entries. A blowing boundary condition for the flowfield solver is proposed. This allows the ablating gas calculated by the material response solver to be correctly injected in the boundary layer. A moving mesh algorithm for the flowfield solver that implicitly enforces the geometric conservation law is presented. Using that capability, a mesh movement procedure for surface recession and for accurate shock capturing is proposed. The entire technique is tested using a material response solver with surface ablation and pyrolysis coupled to a hypersonic solver for weakly ionized flows in thermochemical nonequilibrium. Results using the reentry trajectory of the IRV-2 test vehicle are presented, showing that the surface heat fluxes remain accurate as the ve...

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