4.6 Article

Numerical simulation of a methane-oxygen rotating detonation rocket engine

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMBUSTION INSTITUTE
Volume 38, Issue 3, Pages 3777-3786

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.proci.2020.06.288

Keywords

Rotating detonation engines; Pressure gain combustion; Non-premixed detonation; Rocket engines; Numerical simulations

Funding

  1. NASA Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate (ARMD) Fellowship [80NSSC18K1735]
  2. US DOE/NETL University Turbine Systems Research (UTSR) under DOE [DE-FE0025315, DE-FE0023983]
  3. AFRL Lab Task through the AFOSR Energy, Combustion, Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics portfolio [17RQCOR484]

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The rotating detonation engine is an important realization of pressure gain combustion for rocket applications, characterized by a highly unsteady flow field and entrainment of partially-burnt gases post-detonation. Numerical simulations show spatially fluctuating detonation wave strengths and parasitic combustion of fresh reactants in the flow field.
The rotating detonation engine (RDE) is an important realization of pressure gain combustion for rocket applications. The RDE system is characterized by a highly unsteady flow field, with multiple reflected pressure waves following detonation and an entrainment of partially-burnt gases in the post-detonation region. While experimental efforts have provided macroscopic properties of RDE operation, limited accessibility for optical and flow-field diagnostic equipment constrain the understanding of mechanisms that lend to wave stability, controllability, and sustainability. To this end, high-fidelity numerical simulations of a methane-oxygen rotating detonation rocket engine (RDRE) with an impinging discrete injection scheme are performed to provide detailed insight into the detonation and mixing physics and anomalous behavior within the system. Two primary detonation waves reside at a standoff distance from the base of the channel, with peak detonation heat release at approximately 10 mm from the injection plane. The high plenum pressures and micro-nozzle injector geometry contribute to fairly stiff injectors that are minimally affected by the passing detonation wave. There is no large scale circulation observed in the reactant mixing region, and the fuel distribution is asymmetric with a rich mixture attached to the inner wall of the annulus. The detonation waves' strengths spatially fluctuate, with large variations in local wave speed and flow compression. The flow field is characterized by parasitic combustion of the fresh reactant mixture as well as post-detonation deflagration of residual gases. By the exit plane of the RDRE, approximately 95.7% of the fuel has been consumed. In this work, a detailed statistical analysis of the interaction between mixing and detonation is presented. The results highlight the merit of high-fidelity numerical studies in investigating an RDRE system and the outcomes may be used to improve its performance. (c) 2020 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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