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High-pressure droplet combustion studiesThis is a joint research program, pursued by investigators at the University of Tokyo, UCSD, and NASA Lewis Research Center. The focus is on high-pressure combustion of miscible binary fuel droplets. It involves construction of an experimental apparatus in Tokyo, mating of the apparatus to a NASA-Lewis 2.2-second drop-tower frame in San Diego, and performing experiments in the 2.2-second tower in Cleveland, with experimental results analyzed jointly by the Tokyo, UCSD, and NASA investigators. The project was initiated in December, 1990 and has now involved three periods of drop-tower testing by Mikami at Lewis. The research accomplished thus far concerns the combustion of individual fiber-supported droplets of mixtures of n-heptane and n-hexadecane, initially about 1 mm diameter, under free-fall microgravity conditions. Ambient pressures ranged up to 3.0 MPa, extending above the critical pressures of both pure fuels, in room-temperature nitrogen-oxygen atmospheres having oxygen mole fractions X of 0.12 and 0.13. The general objective is to study near-critical and super-critical combustion of these droplets and to see whether three-stage burning, observed at normal gravity, persists at high pressures in microgravity. Results of these investigations will be summarized here; a more complete account soon will be published.
Document ID
19930011027
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Mikami, Masato
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Kono, M.
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Sato, Junichi
(Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co. Ltd. Tokyo, Japan)
Dietrich, Daniel L.
(Sverdrup Technology, Inc. Cleveland, OH., United States)
Williams, Forman A.
(California Univ. San Diego, La Jolla., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
February 1, 1993
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Lewis Research Center, The Second International Microgravity Combustion Workshop
Subject Category
Inorganic And Physical Chemistry
Accession Number
93N20216
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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