Abstract

The propagation of detonation waves (i.e., supersonic combustion waves) in non-uniform gaseous mixtures has become a matter of interest over the past several years due to the development of rotating detonation engines. It was shown in a number of recent theoretical studies of one-dimensional pulsating detonation that perturbation of the parameters in front of the detonation wave can lead to a resonant amplification of intrinsic pulsations for a certain range of perturbation wavelengths. This work is dedicated to the clarification of the mechanism of this effect. One-dimensional reactive Euler equations with single-step Arrhenius kinetics were solved. Detonation propagation in a gas with sine waves in density was simulated in a shock-attached frame of reference. We carried out a series of simulations, varying the wavelength of the disturbances. We obtained a non-linear dependence of the amplitude of these pulsations on the wavelength of disturbances with resonant amplification for a certain range of wavelengths. The gain in velocity was about 25% of the Chapman–Jouguet velocity of the stable detonation wave. The effect is explained using the characteristic analysis in the x-t diagram. For the resonant case, we correlated the pulsation period with the time it takes for the C+ and C− characteristics to travel through the effective reaction zone. A similar pulsation mechanism is realized when a detonation wave propagates in a homogeneous medium.

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