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Effects of Bypass Flow Distribution on Cold Flow Characteristics of Integrated Afterburner
Author(s) -
Xiang-zhong Jia,
Yong Shan,
XU Xing-ping,
Jingzhou Zhang,
Xiao-Ming Tan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
energies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.598
H-Index - 93
ISSN - 1996-1073
DOI - 10.3390/en14185842
Subject(s) - mechanics , injector , inlet , flow (mathematics) , mixing (physics) , annulus (botany) , distribution uniformity , volumetric flow rate , computational fluid dynamics , environmental science , combustion , materials science , mechanical engineering , chemistry , engineering , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , composite material
Integrated design is a trend in the development of afterburners, and the distribution of cold flow is directly related to their flow field characteristics, combustion organization, and the cooling effect of components. Numerical simulations were performed to illustrate the effects of bypass flow distribution on the flow distribution, mixing characteristics, and cooling efficiency of the components by varying the cooling flow path structure parameters. Within the range of parameters in this study, it can be indicated that with the increase of heat shield inlet height and afterburner annulus height, the total pressure recovery coefficient along the path increased accordingly, and the increasing rate at the afterburner outlet is 1.12% and 1.19%, respectively. The average cooling efficiency of radial flameholder, circumferential flameholder, and fuel injector all decrease, but the rate of decrease varies slightly depending on the location of the components. The increase of heat shield inlet height would reduce thermal mixing efficiency by approximately 5.4% at the afterburner outlet, and the increase of afterburner annular height would increase about 2.9%.

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