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Reduced order design and investigation of intakes for high speed propulsion systems

Cakir, Bora O. LU orcid ; Ispir, Ali Can and Saracoglu, Bayindir H. (2022) In Acta Astronautica 199. p.259-276
Abstract

Ramjet propulsion is commonly preferred to power supersonic and hypersonic vehicles for cruising faster than Mach 3. This is an elegant solution owing to the lean architecture which does not embody any rotating parts. Although the geometry of the engine is simple as compared to turbine based configurations, the flow physics through the engine duct is quite complex and the flow speeds modulate between the supersonic and subsonic regimes multiple times. The design and performance analysis of ramjet engines are vital to ensure that propulsion system can satisfy the flight trajectory requirements. Therefore, this study introduces a reduced order holistic approach for design and assessment of the flow development in high-speed propulsion... (More)

Ramjet propulsion is commonly preferred to power supersonic and hypersonic vehicles for cruising faster than Mach 3. This is an elegant solution owing to the lean architecture which does not embody any rotating parts. Although the geometry of the engine is simple as compared to turbine based configurations, the flow physics through the engine duct is quite complex and the flow speeds modulate between the supersonic and subsonic regimes multiple times. The design and performance analysis of ramjet engines are vital to ensure that propulsion system can satisfy the flight trajectory requirements. Therefore, this study introduces a reduced order holistic approach for design and assessment of the flow development in high-speed propulsion systems composed of generic elements of ramjet/scramjet engine configurations. Accordingly, the intakes designed based on axisymmetric flow templates are used to provide the necessary freestream flow modulation prior to the isolator through which a normal shock assumption is applied. The resultant flow properties are utilized for the combustion module where the flow expansion within the combustor and nozzle components are computed based on 1D steady inviscid flow equations coupled with detailed chemistry approach and JANAF tables. The module was validated and verified with the experimental and numerical data obtained for a dual-mode ramjet/scramjet combustor. Consequently, the parameters such as thrust, fuel consumption and specific impulse are calculated to quantify the engine performance for each design. Finally, the employment of the low fidelity model is demonstrated over a family of ramjet flow paths where the design space is confined based on the requirements of a high-supersonic cruise vehicle.

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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Detailed chemistry, High-speed intake design, Propulsive performance, Ramjet engine, Reduced order modeling
in
Acta Astronautica
volume
199
pages
18 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85135689490
ISSN
0094-5765
DOI
10.1016/j.actaastro.2022.07.037
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b95f2b3b-9ab5-4515-b057-2ff4c8c50a7a
date added to LUP
2022-09-12 12:19:06
date last changed
2022-09-12 12:19:06
@article{b95f2b3b-9ab5-4515-b057-2ff4c8c50a7a,
  abstract     = {{<p>Ramjet propulsion is commonly preferred to power supersonic and hypersonic vehicles for cruising faster than Mach 3. This is an elegant solution owing to the lean architecture which does not embody any rotating parts. Although the geometry of the engine is simple as compared to turbine based configurations, the flow physics through the engine duct is quite complex and the flow speeds modulate between the supersonic and subsonic regimes multiple times. The design and performance analysis of ramjet engines are vital to ensure that propulsion system can satisfy the flight trajectory requirements. Therefore, this study introduces a reduced order holistic approach for design and assessment of the flow development in high-speed propulsion systems composed of generic elements of ramjet/scramjet engine configurations. Accordingly, the intakes designed based on axisymmetric flow templates are used to provide the necessary freestream flow modulation prior to the isolator through which a normal shock assumption is applied. The resultant flow properties are utilized for the combustion module where the flow expansion within the combustor and nozzle components are computed based on 1D steady inviscid flow equations coupled with detailed chemistry approach and JANAF tables. The module was validated and verified with the experimental and numerical data obtained for a dual-mode ramjet/scramjet combustor. Consequently, the parameters such as thrust, fuel consumption and specific impulse are calculated to quantify the engine performance for each design. Finally, the employment of the low fidelity model is demonstrated over a family of ramjet flow paths where the design space is confined based on the requirements of a high-supersonic cruise vehicle.</p>}},
  author       = {{Cakir, Bora O. and Ispir, Ali Can and Saracoglu, Bayindir H.}},
  issn         = {{0094-5765}},
  keywords     = {{Detailed chemistry; High-speed intake design; Propulsive performance; Ramjet engine; Reduced order modeling}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{259--276}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Acta Astronautica}},
  title        = {{Reduced order design and investigation of intakes for high speed propulsion systems}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actaastro.2022.07.037}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.actaastro.2022.07.037}},
  volume       = {{199}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}