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      Ignition Experiments of Hydrocarbons in a Mach 8 Shape-Transitioning Scramjet Engine

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          Abstract

          The design and testing of a cavity flameholder in a Mach 8 rectangular-to-elliptical shape-transitioning scramjet is presented. The experimental results presented are from the shock tunnel testing of the engine, fitted with the cavity combustor and fueled by gaseous ethylene, methane, and hydrogen. Axisymmetric simulations of a cavity in a diverging combustor were used to confirm that the cavity flow would fully establish in the limited test time available in our impulse facility. The cavity flameholder was designed such that autoignition and flameholding of gaseous ethylene–air mixtures should occur. Static pressure measurements were taken along the entire flowpath of engine. The engine was fueled at equivalence ratio ranging from 0.58 < φ < 0.71 . Successful combustion and flameholding of ethylene and hydrogen was observed at a flight Mach number of 7.3 and a dynamic pressure of 53.5 kPa at an altitude of 28.7 km. Methane did not ignite at any of the conditions tested.

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          Most cited references33

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          Scramjet Engines: The First Forty Years

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            Comprehensive Approach to Verification and Validation of CFD Simulations—Part 1: Methodology and Procedures

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              Cavity Flame-Holders for Ignition and Flame Stabilization in Scramjets: An Overview

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                jpp
                Journal of Propulsion and Power
                J. Propulsion
                American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
                0748-4658
                1533-3876
                28 July 2016
                November-December 2016
                : 32
                : 6
                : 1462-1471
                Affiliations
                University of Queensland , Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia
                Author notes
                [*]

                Ph.D. Candidate, Centre for Hypersonics. Student Member AIAA.

                [†]

                Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Hypersonics. Member AIAA.

                [‡]

                Lecturer, Centre for Hypersonics. Member AIAA.

                [§]

                Senior Lecturer, Centre for Hypersonics. Senior Member AIAA.

                [¶]

                Professor, Centre for Hypersonics. Senior Member AIAA.

                Article
                B36099 B36099
                10.2514/1.B36099
                b05e440e-5604-4288-8a55-84b0235322b6
                Copyright © 2016 by Denman, Chan, Brieschenk, Veeraragavan, Wheatley, and Smart. Published by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc., with permission. Copies of this paper may be made for personal and internal use, on condition that the copier pay the per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center (CCC). All requests for copying and permission to reprint should be submitted to CCC at www.copyright.com; employ the ISSN 0748-4658 (print) or 1533-3876 (online) to initiate your request.
                History
                : 17 November 2015
                : 18 March 2016
                : 11 May 2016
                Page count
                Figures: 15, Tables: 3
                Categories
                Full-Length Paper

                Engineering,Physics,Mechanical engineering,Space Physics
                Engineering, Physics, Mechanical engineering, Space Physics

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