Numerical Simulation of Heat Transfer and Chemistry in the Wake behind a Hypersonic Slender Body at Angle of Attack

The effect of thermal and chemical boundary conditions on the structure and chemical composition of the wake behind a 3D Mach 7 sphere-cone at an angle of attack of 5 degrees and an altitude of roughly 30,000 m is explored. A special emphasis is placed on determining the number density of chemical s...

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Main Authors: Matthew J. Satchell, Jeffrey M. Layng, Robert B. Greendyke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-03-01
Series:Aerospace
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/5/1/30
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author Matthew J. Satchell
Jeffrey M. Layng
Robert B. Greendyke
author_facet Matthew J. Satchell
Jeffrey M. Layng
Robert B. Greendyke
author_sort Matthew J. Satchell
collection DOAJ
description The effect of thermal and chemical boundary conditions on the structure and chemical composition of the wake behind a 3D Mach 7 sphere-cone at an angle of attack of 5 degrees and an altitude of roughly 30,000 m is explored. A special emphasis is placed on determining the number density of chemical species which might lead to detection via the electromagnetic spectrum. The use of non-ablating cold-wall, adiabatic, and radiative equilibrium wall boundary conditions are used to simulate extremes in potential thermal protection system designs. Non-ablating, as well as an ablating boundary condition using the “steady-state ablation” assumption to compute a surface energy balance on the wall are used in order to determine the impacts of ablation on wake composition. On-body thermal boundary conditions downstream of an ablating nose are found to significantly affect wake temperature and composition, while the role of catalysis is found to change the composition only marginally except at very high temperatures on the cone’s surface for the flow regime considered. Ablation is found to drive the extensive production of detectable species otherwise unrelated to ablation, whereas if ablation is not present at all, air-species which would otherwise produce detectable spectra are minimal. Studies of afterbody cooling techniques, as well as shape, are recommended for further analysis.
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spelling doaj.art-5d7e58cf107d4118a3a2e1347b46ad382022-12-21T18:52:10ZengMDPI AGAerospace2226-43102018-03-01513010.3390/aerospace5010030aerospace5010030Numerical Simulation of Heat Transfer and Chemistry in the Wake behind a Hypersonic Slender Body at Angle of AttackMatthew J. Satchell0Jeffrey M. Layng1Robert B. Greendyke2High Performance Computing Research Center, Department of Aeronautics, USAF Academy, El Paso County, CO 80840, USADepartment of Aeronautics, USAF Academy, El Paso County, CO 80840, USAAir Force Institute of Technology, AFIT 2950 Hobson Way, WPAFB, Greene County, OH 45433, USAThe effect of thermal and chemical boundary conditions on the structure and chemical composition of the wake behind a 3D Mach 7 sphere-cone at an angle of attack of 5 degrees and an altitude of roughly 30,000 m is explored. A special emphasis is placed on determining the number density of chemical species which might lead to detection via the electromagnetic spectrum. The use of non-ablating cold-wall, adiabatic, and radiative equilibrium wall boundary conditions are used to simulate extremes in potential thermal protection system designs. Non-ablating, as well as an ablating boundary condition using the “steady-state ablation” assumption to compute a surface energy balance on the wall are used in order to determine the impacts of ablation on wake composition. On-body thermal boundary conditions downstream of an ablating nose are found to significantly affect wake temperature and composition, while the role of catalysis is found to change the composition only marginally except at very high temperatures on the cone’s surface for the flow regime considered. Ablation is found to drive the extensive production of detectable species otherwise unrelated to ablation, whereas if ablation is not present at all, air-species which would otherwise produce detectable spectra are minimal. Studies of afterbody cooling techniques, as well as shape, are recommended for further analysis.http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/5/1/30hypersonicwakechemistryslender-bodyangle of attackdetectionafter-body
spellingShingle Matthew J. Satchell
Jeffrey M. Layng
Robert B. Greendyke
Numerical Simulation of Heat Transfer and Chemistry in the Wake behind a Hypersonic Slender Body at Angle of Attack
Aerospace
hypersonic
wake
chemistry
slender-body
angle of attack
detection
after-body
title Numerical Simulation of Heat Transfer and Chemistry in the Wake behind a Hypersonic Slender Body at Angle of Attack
title_full Numerical Simulation of Heat Transfer and Chemistry in the Wake behind a Hypersonic Slender Body at Angle of Attack
title_fullStr Numerical Simulation of Heat Transfer and Chemistry in the Wake behind a Hypersonic Slender Body at Angle of Attack
title_full_unstemmed Numerical Simulation of Heat Transfer and Chemistry in the Wake behind a Hypersonic Slender Body at Angle of Attack
title_short Numerical Simulation of Heat Transfer and Chemistry in the Wake behind a Hypersonic Slender Body at Angle of Attack
title_sort numerical simulation of heat transfer and chemistry in the wake behind a hypersonic slender body at angle of attack
topic hypersonic
wake
chemistry
slender-body
angle of attack
detection
after-body
url http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/5/1/30
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