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Experimental studies on the Hartmann tube

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 April 2024

E. Rathakrishnan*
Affiliation:
Department of Aerospace Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, Kanpur, India
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Abstract

The effect of tube depth, the separation distance between the tube and nozzle exit, and the nozzle pressure ratio on the characteristics of the flow coming out of the Hartmann tube was studied experimentally. The configuration used in this work consists of an underexpanded sonic jet emanating from a convergent nozzle directed into a closed-ended cylindrical tube of the same diameter (D) as the nozzle exit. The nozzle was operated at two levels of underexpansion corresponding to nozzle pressure ratio (NPR) 3 and 5. The distance (S) from nozzle exit and tube inlet was varied from 0.4D to 4D. Discrete high-amplitude tones (the jet regurgitant, JRG) were produced, only at certain (periodic) intervals (near the shock-cell terminations) of spacing for NPR 3, while for NPR 5 the JRG tones are produced at all points beyond the first shock-cell. For locations other than these, high-frequency tones (screech mode) were observed. The connection between the jet structure and operating modes revealed that the location of standoff shock ahead of the tube with respect to the jet structure plays a dominant role in the observed ‘modes’ rather than the nozzle tube separation. The results reveal that the frequency response of longer tubes in JRG mode approaches their quarter wave frequencies. The high-frequency oscillations observed in the screech mode showed independency with cavity (pipe) depth, contrary to the available literature, the transition between ‘different modes’ oscillation is a function of cavity depth.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal Aeronautical Society
Figure 0

Figure 1. Organ pipe.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Galton whistle.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Levavasaeur whistle.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Hartmann tube.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Diagram to illustrate Hartmann’s postulated mechanism.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Stem-jet generator.

Figure 6

Figure 7. Jet facility.

Figure 7

Figure 8. Photographic view of the nozzle and Hartmann tube.

Figure 8

Figure 9. Shock waves in periodic jet efflux.

Figure 9

Figure 10. Shadowgraph image of the free jet at different levels of expansion. (a) NPR 2.5, (b) NPR 3.0, (c) NPR 3.5, (d) NPR 4.0, (e) NPR 4.5, (f) NPR 5.0, (g) NPR 5.5 and (h) NPR 6.0.

Figure 10

Figure 11. Variation of shock cross-over/Mach disk location and cell termination location with NPR.

Figure 11

Figure 12. Centreline pitot pressure of free jet at NPR 2.5.

Figure 12

Figure 13. Centreline pitot pressure of free jet at NPR 3.0.

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Figure 14. Centreline pitot pressure of free jet at NPR 4.0.

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Figure 15. Centreline pitot pressure of free jet at NPR 5.0.

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Figure 16. Centreline pitot pressure of free jet at NPR 6.0.

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Figure 17. Frequencies corresponding to Maximum amplitude at NPR 3 and 5 (L/D = 8).

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Figure 18. Zonal division of JRG and screech for NPR 3 (L/D = 8).

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Figure 19. Zonal division of JRG and screech for NPR 5 (L/D = 8).

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Figure 20. Shadowgraph images for spacing S/D from 4.0 to 0.4 at NPR 3. (a) S/D = 4, (b) S/D = 3.8, (c) S/D = 3.6, (d) S/D = 3.4, (e) S/D = 3.2, (f) S/D = 3.0, (g) S/D = 2.8, (h) S/D = 2.4, (i) S/D = 2.2, (j) S/D = 2.0, (k) S/D = 1.8, (l) S/D = 1.6, (m) S/D = 1.4, (n) S/D = 1.2, (o) S/D 1.0, (p) S/D = 0.8, (q) S/D = 0.6 (r) S/D = 0.4.

Figure 20

Figure 21. Shadowgraph images for spacing S/D from 4.0 and 0.8 at NPR 5. (a) S/D = 4.0 and (b) S/D = 0.8.

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Figure 22. Frequency vs. cavity depth at S/D = 1.

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Figure 23. Frequency vs. cavity depth at S/D = 2.

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Figure 24. Frequency vs. cavity depth at S/D = 3.

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Figure 25. Average frequency (JRG) vs cavity depth at S/D = 1.

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Figure 26. Frequency (JRG) vs. NPR at S/D = 1.

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Figure 27. Frequency (JRG) vs. NPR at S/D = 2.

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Figure 28. Frequency (JRG) vs. NPR at S/D = 3.

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Figure 29. Transition dependence on L/D.

Figure 29

Figure 30. Amplitude variation with NPR for S/D = 1.

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Figure 31. Amplitude variation with NPR for S/D = 2.

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Figure 32. Amplitude variation with NPR for S/D = 3.

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Figure 33. Amplitude variation with L/D for S/D = 1.

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Figure 34. Amplitude variation with L/D for S/D = 2.

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Figure 35. Amplitude variation with L/D for S/D = 3.

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Figure 36. Broadband variation with NPR.