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Effect of Fuel Injection and Mixing Characteristics on Pulse-Combustor Performance at High-Pressure
Author(s) -
Shaye Yungster,
Daniel E. Paxson,
Hugh D. Perkins
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
49th aiaa/asme/sae/asee joint propulsion conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2014-3728
Subject(s) - combustor , mixing (physics) , materials science , fuel injection , pulse (music) , nuclear engineering , mechanics , environmental science , combustion , automotive engineering , electrical engineering , engineering , physics , chemistry , voltage , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics
Recent calculations of pulse-combustors operating at high-pressure conditions produced pressure gains significantly lower than those observed experimentally and computationally at atmospheric conditions. The factors limiting the pressure-gain at high-pressure conditions are identified, and the effects of fuel injection and air mixing characteristics on performance are investigated. New pulse-combustor configurations were developed, and the results show that by suitable changes to the combustor geometry, fuel injection scheme and valve dynamics the performance of the pulse-combustor operating at high-pressure conditions can be increased to levels comparable to those observed at atmospheric conditions. In addition, the new configurations can significantly reduce the levels of NOx emissions. One particular configuration resulted in extremely low levels of NO, producing an emission index much less than one, although at a lower pressure-gain. Calculations at representative cruise conditions demonstrated that pulse-combustors can achieve a high level of performance at such conditions.

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