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Journal ArticleDOI

Behaviour of an air-assisted jet submitted to a transverse high-frequency acoustic field

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TLDR
In this paper, the effect of transverse acoustic perturbations on a coaxial air-assisted jet is studied experimentally and five breakup regimes have been identified according to the flow conditions, in the absence of acoustics.
Abstract
Acoustic instabilities with frequencies roughly higher than 1 kHz remain among the most harmful instabilities, able to drastically affect the operation of engines and even leading to the destruction of the combustion chamber. By coupling with resonant transverse modes of the chamber, these pressure fluctuations can lead to a large increase of heat transfer fluctuations, as soon as fluctuations are in phase. To control engine stability, the mechanisms leading to the modulation of the local instantaneous rate of heat release must be understood. The commonly developed global approaches cannot identify the dominant mechanism(s) through which the acoustic oscillation modulates the local instantaneous rate of heat release. Local approaches are being developed based on processes that could be affected by acoustic perturbations. Liquid atomization is one of these processes. In the present paper, the effect of transverse acoustic perturbations on a coaxial air-assisted jet is studied experimentally. Here, five breakup regimes have been identified according to the flow conditions, in the absence of acoustics. The liquid jet is placed either at a pressure anti-node or at a velocity anti-node of an acoustic field. Acoustic levels up to 165 dB are produced. At a pressure anti-node, breakup of the liquid jet is affected by acoustics only if it is assisted by the coaxial gas flow. Effects on the liquid core are mainly due to the unsteady modulation of the annular gas flow induced by the acoustic waves when the mean dynamic pressure of the gas flow is lower than the acoustic pressure amplitude. At a velocity anti-node, local nonlinear radiation pressure effects lead to the flattening of the jet into a liquid sheet. A new criterion, based on an acoustic radiation Bond number, is proposed to predict jet flattening. Once the sheet is formed, it is rapidly atomized by three main phenomena: intrinsic sheet instabilities, Faraday instability and membrane breakup. Globally, this process promotes atomization. The spray is also spatially organized under these conditions: large liquid clusters and droplets with a low ejection velocity can be brought back to the velocity anti-node plane, under the action of the resulting radiation force. These results suggest that in rocket engines, because of the large number of injectors, a spatial redistribution of the spray could occur and lead to inhomogeneous combustion producing high-frequency combustion instabilities.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Transverse combustion instabilities: Acoustic, fluid mechanic, and flame processes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review of transverse acoustic wave motions in air-breathing systems and discuss issues associated with simulating or scaling instabilities, either in subscale experimental geometries or by attempting to understand instability physics using identical axial oscillations of the same frequency as the transverse mode of interest.
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Exploration of combustion instability triggering using Large Eddy Simulation of a multiple injector Liquid Rocket Engine

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the possibility of analyzing combustion instabilities in small-scale rocket engines by making use of Large Eddy Simulations (LES) and found that the overall acoustic activity mainly results from the combination of one transverse and one radial mode of the combustion chamber, which are also strongly coupled with the oxidizer injectors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breakup and atomization of a round coal water slurry jet by an annular air jet

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the breakup and atomization of coal water slurry (CWS) jets using high speed digital camera and found that when the viscosity of CWS is low, the CWS jet is Rayleigh-type breakup at low air velocity; when the air velocity is very high, all CWS jets are in atomization regime.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental investigation of cryogenic flame dynamics under transverse acoustic modulations

TL;DR: In this paper, high-frequency combustion instabilities coupled by transverse acoustic modes were investigated. But the authors focused on highfrequency combustion in a model-scale combustor and did not investigate the physical processes leading to the growth of such instabilities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Large eddy simulations of multiple transcritical coaxial flames submitted to a high-frequency transverse acoustic modulation

TL;DR: In this paper, the dynamics of multiple cryogenic jet flames interacting with high frequency transverse acoustic modes are investigated. But the authors focus on the effects of high-frequency instabilities in liquid rocket engines.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Acoustic Radiation Pressure on Spheres

TL;DR: In this paper, it has been shown that at supersonic frequencies the acoustic radiation pressures on spheres and discs become sufficiently large to be measured easily, at any rate, in liquids.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrasonic Atomization of Liquids

TL;DR: The mechanism of ultrasonic atomization involves the rupture of capillary surface waves and the subsequent ejection of the wave peaks from the surface as particles as mentioned in this paper, and the number of particles produced was found to be a constant fraction, 0.34, of the capillary wavelength.
Journal ArticleDOI

Liquid Jet Instability and Atomization in a Coaxial Gas Stream

TL;DR: In this article, an overview of the near and far-field breakup and atomization of a liquid jet by a high speed annular gas jet is presented, and various regimes of liquid jet breakup are discussed in the parameter space of the liquid Reynolds number, the aerodynamic Weber number, and the ratio of the momentum fluxes between the gas and the liquid streams.

Liquid propellant rocket combustion instability

TL;DR: In this paper, the extent of combustion instability problems in liquid propellant rocket engines and recommendations for their solution are discussed, both theoretical and experimental, with emphasis on fundamental principles and relationships between alternative approaches.
Book

Liquid rocket engine combustion instability

TL;DR: In this article, the first published in the United States on the subject since NASA's Liquid Rocket Combustion Instability (NASA SP-194) in 1972, the authors cover four major subject areas: engine phenomenology and case studies, fundamental mechanisms of combustion instability, combustion instability analysis and engine and component testing.