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Measurement and Computation of Supersonic Flow in a Lobed Diffuser-Mixer for Trapped Vortex CombustorsThe trapped vortex combustor (TVC) pioneered by Air Force Research Laboratories (AFRL) is under consideration as an alternative to conventional gas turbine combustors. The TVC has demonstrated excellent operational characteristics such as high combustion efficiency, low NO(x) emissions, effective flame stabilization, excellent high-altitude relight capability, and operation in the lean-burn or rich burn-quick quench-lean burn (RQL) modes of combustion. It also has excellent potential for lowering the engine combustor weight. This performance at low to moderate combustor mach numbers has stimulated interest in its ability to operate at higher combustion mach number, and for aerospace, this implies potentially higher flight mach numbers. To this end, a lobed diffuser-mixer that enhances the fuel-air mixing in the TVC combustor core was designed and evaluated, with special attention paid to the potential shock system entering the combustor core. For the present investigation, the lobed diffuser-mixer combustor rig is in a full annular configuration featuring sixfold symmetry among the lobes, symmetry within each lobe, and plain parallel, symmetric incident flow. During hardware cold-flow testing, significant discrepancies were found between computed and measured values for the pitot-probe-averaged static pressure profiles at the lobe exit plane. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations were initiated to determine whether the static pressure probe was causing high local flow-field disturbances in the supersonic flow exiting the diffuser-mixer and whether shock wave impingement on the pitot probe tip, pressure ports, or surface was the cause of the discrepancies. Simulations were performed with and without the pitot probe present in the modeling. A comparison of static pressure profiles without the probe showed that static pressure was off by nearly a factor of 2 over much of the radial profile, even when taking into account potential axial displacement of the probe by up to 0.25 in. (0.64 cm). Including the pitot probe in the CFD modeling and data interpretation lead to good agreement between measurement and prediction. Graphical inspection of the results showed that the shock waves impinging on the probe surface were highly nonuniform, with static pressure varying circumferentially among the pressure ports by over 10 percent in some cases. As part of the measurement methodology, such measurements should be routinely supplemented with CFD analyses that include the pitot probe as part of the flow-path geometry.
Document ID
20020080901
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Technical Memorandum (TM)
Authors
Brankovic, Andreja
(Flow Parametrics, LLC Bear, DE United States)
Ryder, Robert C., Jr.
(Flow Parametrics, LLC Bear, DE United States)
Hendricks, Robert C.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Liu, Nan-Suey
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Gallagher, John R.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Shouse, Dale T.
(Department of the Air Force Wright-Patterson AFB, OH United States)
Roquemore, W. Melvyn
(Department of the Air Force Wright-Patterson AFB, OH United States)
Cooper, Clayton S.
(General Electric Aircraft Engines Evendale, OH United States)
Burrus, David L.
(General Electric Aircraft Engines Evendale, OH United States)
Hendricks, John A.
(Diligent Design Toledo, OH United States)
Date Acquired
September 7, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 2002
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Thermodynamics
Report/Patent Number
NASA/TM-2002-211127
E-12861
NAS 1.15:211127
Report Number: NASA/TM-2002-211127
Report Number: E-12861
Report Number: NAS 1.15:211127
Meeting Information
Meeting: 2001 19th International Congress on Instrumentation in Aerospace Simulation Facilities
Location: Cleveland, OH
Country: United States
Start Date: August 27, 2001
End Date: August 30, 2001
Sponsors: NASA Glenn Research Center, Ohio Aerospace Inst., Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, AES
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 910-30-11
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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