Characterization of a new ultra-high pressure shock tube facility for combustion and propulsion studies

Author:

Urso Justin J.12ORCID,Kinney Cory12,Terracciano Anthony C.12,Barak Samuel12,Laich Andrew12,Albright Marley A.12,Pierro Michael12,McGaunn Jonathan12,Vasu Subith S.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Advanced Turbomachinery and Energy Research (CATER), University of Central Florida, 4000 Central Florida Blvd., 40-307, Orlando, Florida 32816-2450, USA

2. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida 32816, USA

Abstract

A new shock tube facility has been designed, constructed, and characterized at the University of Central Florida. This facility is capable of withstanding pressures of up to 1000 atm, allowing for combustion diagnostics of extreme conditions, such as in rocket combustion chambers or in novel power conversion cycles. For studies with toxic gas impurities, the high initial pressures required the development of a gas delivery system to ensure the longevity of the facility and the safety of the personnel. Data acquisition and experimental propagation were implemented with remote access to ensure safety, paired with a LabVIEW- and Python-based user interface. Thus far, test pressures of 270 atm, blast pressures of 730 atm, and temperatures approaching 10 000 K have been achieved. The extreme limitations of this facility allow for emission spectroscopy to be performed during the oxidation of fuel mixtures, e.g., alkanes diluted in argon and carbon dioxide. Ignition delay times were determined and compared to simulations using chemical kinetic mechanisms. The design, experimental procedures, processes of analysis, and uncertainty determination are outlined, and typical pressure profiles are compared with a new gas dynamics solver and empirical correlations developed across multiple shock tube facilities. Preliminary reactive mixture analyses are included with further investigation of the mixtures outlined.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Florida Space Grant Consortium

Argonne National Laboratory

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Instrumentation

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