3.1. Flame Stability Limits
Figure 6 shows the flame stability limits for different injection distances and cavity rear-wall heights. The experiment found that the conventional cavity and the shorter injection distance can effectively broaden the lower limit of the global equivalence ratio for the combustor operation, but the rear-wall-expansion cavity and the longer injection distance can improve the upper limit of the global equivalence ratio for the combustor operation. It is necessary to note that the size of the cavity used in this paper is relatively small in order to facilitate optical observation, thus the flame stability limit of the combustor is narrow. If the overall equivalence ratio is further reduced or increased beyond the flame stability limit given in
Figure 6, flame blowoff or unsuccessful ignition will occur.
High-speed photography is a kind of high-repetition frequency diagnosis technology. It can provide data support for studying the combustion mechanism and dynamic evolution process of flame morphology in supersonic flow fields through high-frequency, short-time recording. With reasonable image-processing capacity, high-speed photography is a popular means of flow field observation in supersonic combustion experiments.
Figure 7 shows the flame blowoff and flashback process of case H8D10ER0.23 near blowoff conditions, including both top and side views at the same instant. The flame flashback process lasts about 0.6 ms, during which the cavity-stabilized flame is near blowoff and then reignited. The flame front is stabilized in the cavity shear layer at the initial instant T
0. The CH* distribution indicates that strong combustion takes place near the cavity trailing edge and then spreads into the mainstream, leading to intense heat release. Due to the influence of the high-speed mainstream and the excessive consumption of the fuel inside the cavity, the flow field in the cavity cannot support the stabilization of the flame front at T
0+0.
1ms and T
0+0.
2ms, and the flame is blown downstream of the cavity. The fuel in the mainstream cannot be effectively ignited due to the disappearance of the flame front. The range of the heat-release zone decreases obviously. At time t
0+0.
3ms, as the flame front is far away from the low-speed region in the cavity, the combustor is in a state of the near blowoff. No flame is found in the cavity, and the fuel in the shear layer is reaccumulated with the supplement of the transverse injection. Then, the flame in the cavity shear-layer is reignited by the internal high-temperature fluid and active group at T
0+0.
4ms. The shear-layer flame develops and is finally established at T
0+0.
5ms. At the same time, it can be found from
Figure 7e,f that the original flame downstream of the cavity is gradually blown off.
The flame oscillation frequency will be more intense with further increases in equivalence ratio. However, the fuel in the cavity shear layer cannot be reignited if the original flame is blown downstream of the cavity. Instead, with the original flame gradually disappears from the observation window, the combustor finally flames out. The reason for this phenomenon may be that the increased penetration depth of fuel leads the flame further into the mainstream, so the flame is more influenced by the high-momentum inflow. Meanwhile, the fuel-rich section of the cavity shear layer is lengthened, and the internal flow field environment is not conducive to flame stabilization, so the flame oscillation will be more intense. At the same time, the temperature and active groups inside the flow field of the cavity have not accumulated well due to the strong flame oscillation, because the fuel in the cavity cannot be reignited. Therefore, the flame is blown off under the action of several coupling factors.
In practice, there will be different requirements for engine combustor thrust due to different working conditions, and the phenomenon of different flame stability limits will have certain reference significance to broaden the working boundary of the engine.
3.2. Effects of Transverse Injection Distance
The experiment finds that changing the injection distance will cause a great influence on flame stability limits, chemical reaction-zone distribution, and flame oscillation. Different image-processing technology will be adopted in this section to capture the flame dynamics.
Figure 8 shows the time-averaged spontaneous emission images and standard deviation images of the CH* signal. In order to improve the contrast of image, the standard deviation image is normalized by the global highest value. White lines indicate 50% and 90% probability contour lines of the flame image. In the present study, the processing method of flame-probability definition is to select 5000 CH* spontaneous emission images, and each image is binarized based on intensity threshold. Then, the image is superimposed and averaged to obtain the flame-probability image. Finally, different probability contour lines are extracted and superimposed on the standard deviation images. The flame-probability image matrix has values ranging from 0 to 1, where 1 means that the flame of the index point always exists and 0.5 means that there is a 50% probability of flame appearing in 5000 pictures. The flame-probability images emphasize the location of the flame signal, but weaken the intensity information of chemical reaction.
Because the upper boundary of flame signal area is often not a straight line, it is difficult to achieve a unified standard under different conditions by manually adding the flame-propagation angle. Therefore, the following method is adopted to define the flame-propagation angle. First, determine the positions of P1 and P2, where P1 is the cavity leading edge and P2 is the index point of the 50% probability contour line of the pixel column where the cavity trailing edge is located. Then, the angle between the extracted straight line and the horizontal line is the flame-propagation angle defined in this paper. Based on the above method, it can be found that the extracted straight line is basically tangential to the upper edge of the flame, which means that the upper edge of the flame is not a straight line. The flame-propagation angle can also be estimated through the flame-probability image.
Figure 8a shows time-averaged CH* spontaneous emission images from different perspectives. The flame structure is similar within the working condition range of the experiment, so case H8D10ER0.2 is selected as an example. The side-view results show that the flame front is anchoring at the front of the cavity shear layer and gradually spreads to the interior of the cavity and the mainstream. The flame-propagation angle is 20.5°, and the flame present is in cavity shear-layer stabilized combustion mode [
15]. The top-view results show that under the condition of single injector, the flame in the cavity shear-layer stabilized mode concentrates downstream of the jet and spreads to the side wall gradually. This means that chemical reaction intensity decreases gradually from the center to both sides.
The standard deviation images of CH* signal are shown in
Figure 8b,c, which represent the fluctuation of CH* signal at different positions in the combustor. The distribution of normalized signals is similar when the rear-wall height or equivalence ratio is changed at the same injection distance. H8D10ER0.2 and H8D10ER0.2 are selected to compare the impact of injection distance on flame oscillation characteristics.
Figure 8b1,c1 show that under the condition of single injector, the high-brightness strip is mainly in the 90% probability contour, but
Figure 8b2,c2 show that the high-brightness strip is within the 50% and 90% probability contour envelope. The difference is mainly because the flame images obtained from each perspective are the two-dimensional integral results of the flame spatial structure. Therefore, a more practical conclusion can be obtained by superposition of two perspectives: the high-brightness strip is wrapped in 50% and 90% probability contour lines on both sides of the flame cone in 3D space, i.e., this part of the flame often disappears due to oscillation. The standard deviation inside the flame cone is only about half of the strongest point. This is because under the condition of single injector, the fuel is mainly concentrated near the central section, so the flame stabilization of this part is higher than that of the two sides. By comparing the flame standard deviation images of
Figure 8b,c at different injection distances, the following two conclusions can be obtained. (1) Under the condition of short injection distance, the flame oscillation intensity near the shear layer is obviously lower than the mainstream; however, under the condition of long distance injection, the strongest oscillation point is mainly concentrated near the leading edge of the shear layer and gradually expands to the main flow and downstream of the shear layer. The main reason for the difference may be that the flame-propagation angle is smaller in the long-distance injection scheme, which leads to lower flame height in the mainstream, so the mainstream has a relatively small effect on the flame. (2) At the same equivalence ratio, with the increase in injection distance, the wrapping range of the two flame-probability contour lines will obviously shrink. The height of the flame in the mainstream decreases and the flame-propagation angle decreases. The flame-propagation angle decreases by 18% from H8D10ER0.2 to H8D40ER0.2. The results indicate that the short-distance condition can effectively increase the chemical reaction area and make the fuel ignite fully.
It can be found from the time-averaged CH* spontaneous emission image in
Figure 8a that the range wrapped by the flame 90% probability contour line basically coincides with the high CH* signal area. This indicates that this region is not only the stable existence zone of flame but also the strong heat-release zone of shear-layer flame.
In order to further analyze the effect of injection distance on the reaction-zone distribution during the stable combustion process, the location of the reaction center is extracted from the flame image. First, the flame images from two perspectives are transformed into grayscale images, then the position coordinates (
xr,
yr and
zr) of the reaction center area are calculated by the brightness weighted-average method. The origin of coordinates is taken from the intersection of the spanwise central section and the cavity leading edge. The values
xr,
yr, and
zr are streamwise, spanwise, and longitudinal coordinates, respectively, which can be calculated by Equation (6):
where
xi,
xj,
yj, and
zi are the image matrix index coordinates obtained from the top view and side view at the same time.
Ii and
Ij are the signal intensity of image matrix index points from two perspectives. The streamwise coordinate X is shared by two perspectives. However, due to the difference in the direction of spatial integration, there is a slight deviation in the weighted average of the two coordinates, so the coordinates of two directions are taken for averaging. The values
yj and
zi are obtained separately from the top and side views, respectively.
Figure 9 shows the calculation results of 150 CH* spontaneous emission images for 15 ms after the spark plug is closed, each data point corresponding to an image. The time-evolution information of the reaction center position is given from three- and two-dimensional space. The high-frequency distribution region of the flame reaction center position of the same injection scheme is marked using the same color marker area. It can be found that the position of the flame reaction center is slightly different with different equivalence ratios, but the overall distribution is near y = 0, indicating that the flame mainly oscillates near the downstream of the injector. This shows that the downstream of injector is more suitable for stable combustion. As the equivalence ratio increases, the central area of the flame will move backward along the flow direction (X) and further rise to make the flame deeper into the mainstream direction (Z). The position of the reaction center of case H8D10ER0.23 even exceeds the rear wall of the cavity. Combined with the flame-probability contour lines in
Figure 8b,c, it can be seen that under the condition of stable combustion, the flame reaction area of short-distance injection is more widely distributed and deeper into the mainstream. Combined with the flame-probability contour lines in
Figure 8b,c, it can be seen that the flame reaction area is more widely distributed and deeper into the mainstream under the condition of short-distance injection.
In order to study the differences in flame stabilization between different injection schemes,
Figure 10 shows the distribution of average flame front position and its standard deviation under different equivalence ratios and two injection distances. The rear-wall-expansion cavity is selected as the flameholder, and the black solid line represents the flow direction position of the cavity leading edge. It can be found that the flame front position oscillates violently when the combustion is in the cavity shear-layer stabilized mode and gradually moves away from the cavity leading edge with increased equivalence ratio. This is mainly because the interaction between the fuel jet and the cavity shear layer increases with the increase in injection pressure, resulting in the increase of the unsteady characteristics of the shear layer and flame front oscillation [
24]. At the same time, the mass of the fuel entering the cavity shear layer increases, and the rich combustion area of the initial section in the shear layer becomes longer. The local fuel–air equivalence ratio is conducive to the downstream movement of the flame front. However, the long-distance injection scheme has a singularity in case H8D40ER0.2. The average value of the flame front position is bigger than in case H8D40ER0.22, and there is an inverse growth. This may be because the interaction between the fuel jet and the cavity shear layer will be reduced when the injection distance increases. Therefore, when the global equivalence ratio is low, the long-distance injection will make it easier for the flame to reach blowoff, which leads to the flame front moving downstream and the flame oscillation increasing. However, such singularity does not appear in the short-distance injection scheme, indicating that when the global equivalence ratio is reduced to reach the flame stability limit of the combustor under the short-distance injection scheme, it is not the lean blowoff limit of the engine. Instead, under the conditions of this experiment, the difficulty of ignition in the short-distance injection scheme at low equivalence ratio is greater than that of flame stabilization.
As the equivalence ratio further increases, the distance between the flame front and the cavity leading edge of case H8D10 will exceed that of H8D40. The flame front position and its standard deviation in H8D10 reach a peak at ER0.23, which is the flame stability limit of the short-distance injection scheme. The global equivalence ratio can be further improved in case H8D40, and the flame front position and its standard deviation reach a peak at the ER0.27, which is the flame stability limit of the long-distance injection scheme. The possible reason for the different flame stability limits of the scramjet combustor with different injection schemes is that: the interaction between the fuel jet and the cavity shear layer is weakened under the long-distance injection scheme and the global equivalence ratio requirement for the cavity shear layer to reach the combustion rich blowoff limit is improved. Generally speaking, the stability of the flame front along the flow direction of the short-distance injection scheme is higher than that of the long-distance injection scheme at low equivalence ratio, but the opposite is true at high equivalence ratio. This difference in flame stabilization is also the reason for the different flame stability limits of the combustor at different injection distances.
The injection distance will cause a significant influence on flame stabilization. The long-distance injection scheme can achieve a higher combustor equivalence ratio upper limit. However, since the short-distance injection scheme can effectively improve flame stabilization and combustion efficiency at medium and low equivalence ratios, the combustor can be properly adjusted as per injection scheme in actual work, to improve the engine-specific impulse and thrust.
3.3. Effects of Cavity Rear-Wall Height
The experiment finds that the change of the cavity rear-wall height will have little influence on flame oscillation compared with injection distance. This indicates that the fuel-mixing degree plays a leading role in the spatial oscillation of reaction position, which is mainly decided by the injection scheme, but they both have great influence on flame stability limits, flame spatial distribution, and combustion heat release.
In order to study why the flame stability limit is different under different rear-wall heights,
Figure 11 shows the distribution of average flame front position and its standard deviation under different cavity rear-wall heights and equivalence ratios. It can be found that under the same injection scheme, the distribution of the average flame front position and its standard deviation has the same trend.
Figure 11a shows that under the short-distance injection scheme, the average flame front position gradually moves away from the cavity leading edge with the increase in equivalence ratio. The stable position of the flame front of the H10 cavity is closer to the cavity leading edge and the flame oscillation is smaller, indicating that the combustion is more stable at lower equivalence ratio.
Figure 11b shows that under the long-distance injection scheme, the average flame front position and the standard deviation of the two types of cavity combustor show a trend of first decreasing and then increasing. However, as the equivalence ratio increases, the average flame front position of the conventional cavity will gradually exceed that of the rear-wall-expansion cavity under different injection schemes. This is because the increase of rear-wall height leads to enhanced interaction between the shear layer and the jet wake, resulting in enhanced mass exchange inside and outside the cavity. Therefore, the lean blowoff limit of flame can be reduced in conventional cavity, while the rich blowoff limit can be easily reached when the global equivalence ratio is high.
By comparing the position changes of flame front in conditions of different injection distances in
Figure 11a,b, it can be found that under the same injection scheme but different cavity configurations, the position of the flame front has the same trend as the change in equivalence ratios. Under the experimental conditions of this paper, it is not the lean blowoff limit in the combustor when the short-distance injection condition reaches the near-blowoff condition. This is mainly due to the difficulty of ignition in cavity being greater than that of combustor flame stabilization, which is related to the discharge power of the spark plug and the flow field environment inside the cavity.
For the distribution difference of reaction centers under different cavity rear-wall height,
Figure 12 shows the dynamic data of the reaction center location for different cases at ER = 0.22. It can be found that the location of the flame reaction center is slightly different. Under the same injection condition, with increased rear-wall height, the flame center will be further away from the cavity along the X axis and further into the mainstream along the Z axis. In other words, the heat-release area in the combustor is larger with increased rear-wall height. It will strengthen the ignition of the fuel with high penetration depth in the mainstream, thus improving the combustion efficiency of the fuel and improving the specific impulse of the combustor.
Figure 13a,b show the wall-pressure distribution at different rear-wall heights and the same injection distance when the equivalence ratio is 0.22. The isolator used is extended straight and has weak resistance to back pressure, so the back pressure causes the boundary-layer separation at the outlet of the isolator, which causes the pressure to transfer forward obviously. It can be found that the combustion heat release mainly occurs near the cavity under different working conditions. The peak pressure is located near the rear wall of the cavity, and then the pressure drops sharply in the downstream expansion section of the cavity. With the increase in rear-wall height, the wall-pressure is higher under the same injection condition. This is consistent with the result of the reaction center distribution shown in
Figure 12. When the combustion is in the cavity shear-layer stabilization mode, the reaction zone penetrating into the mainstream can effectively ignite the fuel there, so as to improve combustion efficiency and enhance heat release. The combustion pressure ratios of different cases are extracted, and as listed in
Table 2, it is found that the traditional cavity can effectively increase the pressure distribution in the combustor at different injection distances. In other words, the conventional cavity can effectively enhance combustion and heat release under stable combustion conditions.
Figure 14 shows the time-averaged schlieren results of the experiments and the numerical calculation in the H10D10ER0.22 scheme. Notably, an oblique shock appears between the fuel injection and the front wall of the cavity in the experimental results. This shock comes from the installation of the replaceable cavity/injection section of the combustor, which is usually unavoidable in scramjet experiments and may have some influences on the flow around the jet and cavity, such as slightly changing the temperature and pressure of the flow approaching the jet and cavity, slightly distorting the cavity shear layer, etc. Though these influences deserve further investigation, we think they do not affect the main conclusions obtained in the present study.
Two schlieren results show the same basic flow field structure. The barrel shock, Mach disk, bow shock, separation shock, reflection shock, and slip line are captured by numerical calculation, further proving that the numerical approach employed in this paper is suitable. In the experimental result, the structure of the bow shock is relatively clear. The position of the interaction point between the upper wall and the bow shock is basically the same as the numerical calculation result. However, obvious local shadows can be seen near the rear wall of the cavity in the experimental result, due to the local density gradient change caused by the impact of the mainstream on the rear wall of the cavity. This phenomenon is not reflected in the numerical calculation result. This is mainly because the experimental schlieren image is the two-dimensional integration result of the first derivative of the entire flow field density along the optical axis of the camera and numerical calculation shows only the schlieren results on the mid-span z/D = 0 plane. In this area, the fuel injection is an obstacle relative to the mainstream, which reduces the impact of the mainstream on the rear wall of the cavity.
Figure 15 shows the calculated fuel distribution for different cavity rear-wall heights when the injection distance is 10 mm and the global equivalence ratio is 0.22. The solid red line represents the sonic line. Due to the impact of the cavity rear-wall expansion, the structure of the supersonic flow field changes greatly compared with the conventional cavity. This is because when the inflow flows through downstream of the cavity, it is equivalent to entering a larger flow channel. It can be found that the penetration depth of the fuel jet in the conventional cavity combustor (
Figure 15a1) exceeds the center section of flow passage shown in
Figure 15b1, but is not reached in the rear-wall-expansion cavity combustor shown in
Figure 15b2. That explains the reason for the difference in the location of reaction center in different cavities.
At the same time, it can be found that the sonic line of the rear-wall-expansion cavity is obviously decreased compared with that of the conventional cavity, indicating that the recirculation zone of the conventional cavity is larger and more fuel is wrapped in the range of the low-speed region. The fuel-entrainment rate shown in
Figure 16, which is calculated by Equation (2), represents the fuel-entrainment capacity of the cavity flameholder, where
is the projected area of the cavity lip section on the transverse section,
is the transverse velocity, and
is the local ethylene fuel mass fraction. The fuel-entrainment rate at the lip section of conventional cavity H10 is the highest, up to 4.3 g/s under current conditions, 16.2% higher than that of rear-wall-expansion cavity H8. This indicates that more fuel is entrained into the conventional cavity at the same injection pressure. Therefore, the conventional cavity can effectively reduce the lower equivalence ratio bound of flame stabilization; however, it leads to flame blowoff easily due to local rich combustion under the high injection pressure.