Effects of Liquid Superheat on Droplet Disruption in a Supersonic Stream
Abstract (Summary)
The effects of liquid superheat on the disruption of liquid droplets accelerated in a
supersonic flow were examined experimentally in a drawdown supersonic wind tunnel.
Monodisperse 60 µm diameter droplets of two test fluids (methanol and ethanol) were
generated upstream of the entrance to the tunnel and accelerated with the supersonic flow
such that their maximum velocities relative to the air flow were transonic. Droplets were
imaged by shadowgraphy and by multiple-exposure direct photography using planar laser
sheet illumination. In addition to providing information on droplet lifetime, the latter
technique allows measurement of the droplet downstream distance versus time, from
which the velocity and acceleration during disruption can be inferred. All droplets were
unheated upon injection. Depending on the vapor pressure of the liquid, the droplets
achieved varying levels of liquid superheat as they experienced low static pressure in the
supersonic flow. Histograms of the droplet population downstream of the supersonic
nozzle throat indicate that the lifetime of droplets in supersonic flow decreases with an
increasing amount of droplet superheat. The shorter lifetime occurs even as the droplet
Weber number (based on initial droplet size) decreases initially due to the lower relative
velocity of the methanol droplets to that of ethanol droplets. This is due to a higher
acceleration than ethanol droplets of comparable initial size. This is consistent with the
more rapid disruption and the faster decrease in mass for the methanol droplets. The
droplets, depending on the level of superheating, in some cases underwent disruption
modes different than those expected for the corresponding values of Weber number.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:Worcester Polytechnic Institute
School Location:USA - Massachusetts
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:supersonic nozzles airplanes
ISBN:
Date of Publication: