Assessment of the Fluid Dynamics Boundary Condition in Ablating or Blowing FlowsImproved models of ablative thermal protection systems have enabled the treatment of materials and fluid behavior in a coupled manner. This paper reports a new approach to modeling the interface between fluid and material, with attention to the conservation of species mass flux and energy on the fluid side of the interface. The general equation is presented and is shown to recover the traditional uncoupled fluid/materials response interface. Including the chemical reaction terms on the CFD side of the interface makes the heat flux exchange independent of the thermodynamic reference state and, therefore, a measurable quantity. Doing so allows the material response solver to take as input the surface heat flux rather than a film coefficient. Removing the film coefficient approximation enables more direct solution of vehicle thermal response but requires consistency in the wall state. The mixing of the shock layer and pyrolysis gas is then computed with finite rate chemistry within the fluid solver. The boundary conditions described have been implemented in the DPLR v4.05.1 code. Char removal is captured using finite rate chemistry in DPLR’s gas surface interaction module. Aspects of coupling these solutions to material response are discussed.
Document ID
20230008757
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Brett A Cruden (Analytical Mechanics Associates (United States) Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Dinesh K Prabhu (Analytical Mechanics Associates (United States) Hampton, Virginia, United States)