Effects of low temperature on near-nozzle breakup and droplet size distribution in airblast kerosene spray

被引:0
|
作者
Zhao, Yue [1 ]
Wang, Yu [1 ]
Zhang, Hang [1 ]
Li, Tianxiong [1 ]
Song, Ge [2 ]
Liu, Tao
Chen, Si [3 ]
Wu, Yingchun [1 ]
Wu, Xuecheng [1 ]
机构
[1] Zhejiang Univ, State Key Lab Clean Energy Utilizat, Hangzhou 310027, Peoples R China
[2] AECC Hunan Aviat Powerplant Res Inst, Zhuzhou 412002, Peoples R China
[3] AECC Guiyang Engine Design Inst, Guiyang 550081, Peoples R China
关键词
SELF-PULSATION CHARACTERISTICS; FUEL TEMPERATURE; DEPENDENT VISCOSITY; SWIRL; ATOMIZATION; INJECTOR; RECESS; MODEL;
D O I
10.1063/5.0239219
中图分类号
O3 [力学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0801 ;
摘要
Atomization of low-temperature fuel is encountered in extreme operating conditions of liquid propulsion systems such as cold start and high-altitude relight for aeroengines. Fuel temperature has a great impact on airblast spray characteristics by influencing fuel viscosity and thus the gas-liquid interaction, which raises the demand to clarify the temperature-dependent transition in near-nozzle breakup behavior and the corresponding droplet size distribution. A liquid-centered swirl coaxial injector is tested on the low-temperature swirl spray and combustion test rig at Zhejiang University, using 25 kHz high-speed digital off-axis holography. RP-3 aviation kerosene is atomized under ignition conditions at temperatures of 233, 253, and 301 K, fuel pressures of 0.03 and 0.69 MPa, and air pressure ranging from 0 to 4.0 kPa. Time-resolved near-nozzle dynamics suggest four types of elementary breakup processes: wavy-sheet breakup, pulsating breakup, membrane-type breakup, and nonaxisymmetric Rayleigh breakup. Each process alternately dominates the near field as fuel Reynolds number ( Ref) and aerodynamic Weber number ( Weg) decrease, corresponding to four primary breakup modes. A mode classification plot is summarized. Spray structures show an extended breakup length and reduced spray cone angle as fuel temperature ( Tf) decreases. Increasing air pressure ( Pg) promotes spray expansion at 0.03 MPa, but contracts spray cone at 0.69 MPa. Cross-sectional Sauter mean diameter (SMD) distribution indicates a solid-cone spray at 0.03 MPa and a hollow cone spray at 0.69 MPa. Lowering Tf will rise the SMD in the spray center at 0.03 MPa and transform the toroidal SMD distribution at 0.69 MPa into a solid one. Finally, a temperature-related SMD model is derived considering the exponential viscosity-temperature relationship, and a good fit with R2 > 0.95 is achieved. This research aims to deepen the understanding of the effects of low temperature on the transition of near-nozzle atomization characteristics for airblast sprays. Both spray visualization and SMD results provide reference for numerical simulations and near-nozzle spray modeling.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [1] Picosecond pulsed digital off-axis holography for near-nozzle droplet size and 3D distribution measurement of a swirl kerosene spray
    Wu, Yingchun
    Wang, Lei
    Lin, Wenhui
    Song, Ge
    He, Yong
    Wu, Xuecheng
    Wang, Zhihua
    Cen, Kefa
    FUEL, 2021, 283
  • [2] Effects of Nozzle Spray Angle on Droplet Size and Velocity
    Hoffmann, W. Clint
    Fritz, Bradley K.
    Bagley, William E.
    Kruger, Greg R.
    Henry, Ryan S.
    Czaczyk, Zbigniew
    PESTICIDE FORMULATION AND DELIVERY SYSTEMS, VOL 33: SUSTAINABILITY: CONTRIBUTIONS FROM FORMULATION TECHNOLOGY, 2014, 1569 : 139 - 150
  • [3] BREAKUP DYNAMICS AND NEAR NOZZLE SPRAY FLUCTUATIONS IN A TWIN-JET CROSS-FLOW AIRBLAST ATOMIZER
    Patil, Shirin
    Sahu, Srikrishna
    ATOMIZATION AND SPRAYS, 2019, 29 (03) : 217 - 250
  • [4] IMAGE PROCESSING TECHNIQUES FOR VELOCITY, INTERFACE COMPLEXITY, AND DROPLET PRODUCTION MEASUREMENT IN THE NEAR-NOZZLE REGION OF A DIESEL SPRAY
    Lounnaci, K.
    Idlahcen, S.
    Sedarsky, D.
    Roze, C.
    Blaisot, J. B.
    Demoulin, F. X.
    ATOMIZATION AND SPRAYS, 2015, 25 (09) : 753 - 775
  • [5] The effects of free stream air velocity on water droplet size and distribution for an impaction spray nozzle
    Walton, D
    Spence, MK
    Reynolds, BT
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS PART A-JOURNAL OF POWER AND ENERGY, 2000, 214 (A5) : 531 - 537
  • [6] Droplet size distribution effects in spray combustion
    Bossard, JA
    Peck, RE
    TWENTY-SIXTH SYMPOSIUM (INTERNATIONAL) ON COMBUSTION, VOLS 1 AND 2, 1996, : 1671 - 1677
  • [7] Effect of aerofoil geometry on droplet size distribution in a pneumatic spray nozzle by VOF simulations
    Kringel, Christian
    Molbak, Victor Hvass
    Haervig, Jakob
    INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATIONS IN HEAT AND MASS TRANSFER, 2025, 163
  • [8] Modeling droplet size distribution near a nozzle outlet in an icing wind tunnel
    Kollar, Laszlo E.
    Farzaneh, Masoud
    Karev, Anatolij K.
    ATOMIZATION AND SPRAYS, 2006, 16 (06) : 673 - 686
  • [9] DROPLET CHARACTERISTICS OF A JET IN CROSSFLOW INSIDE THE PRIMARY BREAKUP ZONE: EFFECTS OF NOZZLE SHAPE AND SIZE
    Kebriaee, A.
    Olyaei, Gh
    ATOMIZATION AND SPRAYS, 2022, 32 (05) : 1 - 14
  • [10] WIND TUNNEL EVALUATION OF SPRAY NOZZLE AND DROPLET SIZE EFFECTS ON SPRAY PENETRATION INSIDE SOYBEAN PLANTS
    Theodoro, Jose G. Castilho
    Ozkan, Erdal
    Zhu, Heping
    Jeon, Hongyoung
    Campos, Javier
    Womac, Alvin R.
    JOURNAL OF THE ASABE, 2025, 68 (01): : 71 - 79