An experimental and computational investigation of a contoured wall fuel injector is presented. The injector was aimed at enabling shock-enhanced mixing for the supersonic combustion ramjet engines currently envisioned for applications on hypersonic vehicles. Three-dimensional flow field surveys, and temporally resolved planar Rayleigh scattering measurements are presented for Mach 1.7 helium injection into Mach 6 air. These experimental data are compared directly with a three-dimensional Navier-Stokes simulation of the flow about the injector array. Two dominant axial vorticity sources are identified and characterized. The axial vorticity produced strong convective mixing of the injectant with the freestream. Shock-impingement was parti...
grantor: University of TorontoIncreasing demand for affordable access to space and high sp...
Interest in high speed, air-breathing propulsion systems such as scramjets has revived in recent yea...
In air breathing propulsion systems for flight at Mach numbers 7 to 20, it is generally accepted tha...
A parametric study of a class of contoured wall fuel injectors is presented. The injectors were aime...
A class of contoured wall fuel injectors was designed to enable shock-enhancement of hypervelocity ...
The performance of a particular class of fuel injectors for scramjet engine applications is address...
A comparative study of the interaction between wall mounted swept-ramp injectors and injector nozzle...
CFD analysis is presented of the mixing characteristics and performance of three fuel injectors at h...
One of the current goals of research in hypersonic, airbreathing propulsion is access to higher Mach...
grantor: University of TorontoIn an effort to develop hypersonic air-breathing propulsion ...
It is desired to maintain supersonic flow through the combustor of supersonic airbreathing engines t...
A numerical study was conducted to evaluate the performance of wall mounted fuel-injectors designed ...
In order to reduce the cost and complexity associated with fuel injection and mixing experiments for...
A computational investigation of a scramjet inlet is presented in this project. The aim is to study ...
The possibility that shock enhanced mixing can substantially increase the rate of mixing between c...
grantor: University of TorontoIncreasing demand for affordable access to space and high sp...
Interest in high speed, air-breathing propulsion systems such as scramjets has revived in recent yea...
In air breathing propulsion systems for flight at Mach numbers 7 to 20, it is generally accepted tha...
A parametric study of a class of contoured wall fuel injectors is presented. The injectors were aime...
A class of contoured wall fuel injectors was designed to enable shock-enhancement of hypervelocity ...
The performance of a particular class of fuel injectors for scramjet engine applications is address...
A comparative study of the interaction between wall mounted swept-ramp injectors and injector nozzle...
CFD analysis is presented of the mixing characteristics and performance of three fuel injectors at h...
One of the current goals of research in hypersonic, airbreathing propulsion is access to higher Mach...
grantor: University of TorontoIn an effort to develop hypersonic air-breathing propulsion ...
It is desired to maintain supersonic flow through the combustor of supersonic airbreathing engines t...
A numerical study was conducted to evaluate the performance of wall mounted fuel-injectors designed ...
In order to reduce the cost and complexity associated with fuel injection and mixing experiments for...
A computational investigation of a scramjet inlet is presented in this project. The aim is to study ...
The possibility that shock enhanced mixing can substantially increase the rate of mixing between c...
grantor: University of TorontoIncreasing demand for affordable access to space and high sp...
Interest in high speed, air-breathing propulsion systems such as scramjets has revived in recent yea...
In air breathing propulsion systems for flight at Mach numbers 7 to 20, it is generally accepted tha...