Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-4rdrl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-14T10:26:37.519Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

An experimental investigation of the effect of ejecting a coolant gas at the nose of a bluff body

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2006

C. H. E. Warren
Affiliation:
Royal Aircraft Establishment, Farnborough, Hants.

Abstract

An experimental investigation has been made of the effect of ejecting nitrogen and helium coolant gases at the nose of a bluff body at a nominal Mach number of 5·8. The gases were ejected with ‘swirl’, to encourage them to flow tangentially to the model surface at ejection, and also straight out. Measurements were made of the pressure and temperature on the surface of the model at incidences of 0, 4, 8°, and for a range of coolant gas flows. From these measurements the flow patterns and distributions of heat flux were deduced.

It was found that ejection with swirl did not in fact lead to an easing of the heating problem because the high tangential velocity with which the coolant was injected into the boundary layer increased the wall shear stress, and hence, by the Reynolds analogy, the heat flux, so that it predominated over the reduced driving temperature difference associated with the cooled boundary layer.

With straight-out ejection it was found that the heat alleviation capabilities of the ejected coolant were reduced considerably if the flow rate was sufficiently large that the bow shock wave was bulged out. However, provided that the external flow is not disturbed, straight-out ejection provides an effective way of reducing the heat flux.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1960 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bogdonoff, S. M. & Vas, I. E. 1959 Preliminary investigations of spiked bodies at hypersonic speeds. J. Aero/Space Sci. 26, 6574.Google Scholar
Cohen, C. B. & Reshotko, E. 1956 The compressible laminar boundary layer with heat transfer and arbitrary pressure gradient. N.A.C.A. Report 1294.Google Scholar
Lam, S. H. 1959 Interaction of a two-dimensional inviscid incompressible jet facing a hypersonic stream. AFOSR TN 59-274, Report, no. 447.Google Scholar
Less, Less L. 1956 Laminar heat transfer over blunt-nosed bodies at hypersonic flight speeds. Jet Propulsion, 26, 25969.Google Scholar
McMahon, H. M. 1958 An experimental study of the effect of mass injection at the stagnation point of a blunt body. California Institute of Technology Guggenheim Aeronautial Laboratory Hypersonic Research Project Memorandum, no. 42.
Richards, H. K. 1957 An experimental investigation of heat transfer rates on a blunt body in hypersonic flow. California Institute of Technology Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory Ae E Thesis.
Warren, C. H. E. 1958 An experimental investigation of the effect of ejecting a coolant gas at the nose of a blunt body. California Institute of Technology Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory Hypersonic Research Project Memorandum, no. 47.