Overexpanded viscous supersonic jet interacting with a unilateral barrier
Abstract
The interaction of a two-dimensional supersonic jet with a unilateral barrier parallel to the flow symmetry plane was studied to account for effects due to gas viscosity and backgound-gas ejection from the region into which the jet expands. In the present experiments, the incident shock wave was reflected at the end of a shock tube equipped with a nozzle. The jet emerged into a pressure chamber 6 cu m in volume and the environmental pressure ratio of the flow in the quasi-stationary phase remained constant. The light source was an OGM-20 laser operating in the giant-pulse mode. Due to background-gas ejection, the gas density in the vicinity of the barrier is much less than on the unconfined side of the jet. The resulting flow is characterized by two distinct environmental pressure ratios: the flow is underexpanded near the barrier, while on the other side it is overexpanded.
- Publication:
-
Zhurnal Tekhnicheskoi Fiziki
- Pub Date:
- July 1986
- Bibcode:
- 1986ZhTFi..56.1426D
- Keywords:
-
- Flow Deflection;
- Supersonic Jet Flow;
- Viscous Flow;
- Barriers;
- Density Distribution;
- Gas Expansion;
- Pressure Distribution;
- Shock Tubes;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer