Abstract

The impact of thermal compression on combustion has been studied experimentally in a hydrogen-fuelled, non-uniform scramjet flowpath. The experimental model consisted of a three-dimensional inlet, a constant area rectangular combustor, and a single-ramp expansion nozzle, all having a constant width, and was tested at an equivalent Mach 10 flight condition with 58 kPa dynamic pressure. Combustion was suppressed in different regions of the combustor by injecting helium as a replacement for hydrogen fuel in either spanwise half of the engine. Thermal compression effects increased the combustion-induced pressure rise by (11.9±5.8)% across the majority of the combustor for an equivalence ratio of 0.8, however a shock-related artefact dominated similar measurements for a case with an equivalence ratio of 1.0. Over a smaller region at the end of the combustor, the combustion-induced pressure rise was increased by (9.4±9.2)% and (6.7±6.8)% for equivalence ratios of 0.8 and 1.0, respectively. Time-integrated OH emission signals increased by 19% and 31%, whilst time-resolved signals increased by 54% and 35%, for equivalence ratios of 0.8 and 1.0, respectively. This study presents the first experimental evidence of thermal compression directly increasing combustion-induced pressure rise in a scramjet engine.

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