Abstract

A three-dimensional flow of dissociating air past blunt bodies is investigated in the framework of the thin viscous shock layer theory. Multicomponent diffusion and homogeneous chemical reactions, including dissociation, recombination, and exchange reactions, are taken into account. The generalized Rankine-Kugoniot conditions are specified on the shock wave and the conditions which take into account the heterogeneous catalytic reactions, on the surface of the body. The viscous shock layer equations are solved together with the heat equations inside the coating, which is carbon with a deposited thin film of SiO2, or quartz. The case of a thermally insulated surface is also considered. The problem for the case of the motion of a body along the re-entry trajectory into Earth's atmosphere is investigated numerically. The temperature of the surface and the heat flux toward it are given as a dependence on the height (tine) of the flight for different cases of the specification of the catalytic reactions. It is shown that the difference between the heat fluxes towards the thermally insulated surface and the fluxes toward the heat-conducting surface in the neighborhood of the stagnation point is of the order of 6–12% for all the cases considered. This makes it possible to decouple the solution of the problem of heat conduction in the body.

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