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A Passive Cavity Concept for Improving the Off-Design Performance of Fixed-Geometry Exhaust NozzlesAn investigation was conducted in the model preparation area of the Langley 16-Foot Transonic Tunnel to study a passive cavity concept for improving the off-design performance of fixed-geometry exhaust nozzles. Passive cavity ventilation (through a porous surface) was applied to divergent flap surfaces and tested at static conditions in a sub-scale, nonaxisymmetric, convergent-divergent nozzle. As part of a comprehensive investigation, force, moment and pressure measurements were taken and focusing schlieren flow visualization was obtained for a baseline configuration and D passive cavity configurations. All tests were conducted with no external flow and high-pressure air was used to simulate jet-exhaust flow at nozzle pressure ratios from 1.25 to approximately 9.50. Results indicate that baseline nozzle performance was dominated by unstable shock-induced boundary-layer separation at off-design conditions, which came about through the natural tendency of overexpanded exhaust flow to satisfy conservation requirements by detaching from the nozzle divergent flaps. Passive cavity ventilation added the ability to control off-design separation in the nozzle by either alleviating separation or encouraging stable separation of the exhaust flow. Separation alleviation offers potential for installed nozzle performance benefits by reducing drag at forward flight speeds, even though it may reduce off-design static thrust efficiency as much as 3.2 percent. Encouraging stable separation of the exhaust flow offers significant performance improvements at static, low NPR and low Mach number flight conditions by improving off-design static thrust efficiency as much as 2.8 percent. By designing a fixed-geometry nozzle with fully porous divergent flaps, where both cavity location and percent open porosity of the flaps could be varied, passive flow control would make it possible to improve off-design nozzle performance across a wide operating range. In addition, the ability to encourage separation on one flap while alleviating it on the other makes it possible to generate thrust vectoring in the nozzle through passive flow control.
Document ID
19960024952
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Asbury, Scott C.
(NASA Hampton, VA United States)
Gunther, Christopher L.
(NASA Hampton, VA United States)
Hunter, Craig A.
(George Washington Univ. Hampton, VA United States)
Date Acquired
August 17, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1996
Publication Information
Publisher: American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Subject Category
Aircraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
AIAA Paper 96-2541
NAS 1.15:111589
NASA-TM-111589
Meeting Information
Meeting: Joint Propulsion Conference
Location: Lake Buena Vista, FL
Country: United States
Start Date: July 1, 1996
End Date: July 3, 1996
Sponsors: American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Society of Automotive Engineers, Inc., American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, American Society for Electrical Engineers
Accession Number
96N27080
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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