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Showing 4 results for Kebriaee

Eiman Bondar Saheby, Ghader Olyaei, Azadeh Kebriaee,
Volume 16, Issue 11 (1-2017)
Abstract

Integration of airframe and propulsion system is one of the most challenging steps in flight vehicle design cycles. In this paper, a three-dimensional supersonic inlet based on the wave-derived geometry technique has been designed and analyzed. Although the considered method was created for hypersonic forbodies, the idea is fully operational for the low supersonic inlet design at Mach 1.6. The inlet concept in this paper is formed from predefined profile elements which are used to generate the three-dimensional geometry in an oblique shock pattern. By this approach, the curved corner of the inlet entrance edge can generate the same shock as the main compression surface and also these curved surfaces provide the optimum transition between entrance geometry and compressor face which is important for the airflow quality and propulsive efficiency. The new concept has been validated by a series of accurate CFD simulations with completely structural grid domains. The major inlet's performance factors like total pressure recovery, flow distortion and mass flow capture ratio are calculated. The concept and it's accurate numerical simulations create a baseline for more advanced designs and researches about the three-dimensional inlets and geometry transition techniques between the different sections of duct.
Eman Bandar Saheby, Ghader Olyaei, Azadeh Kebriaee,
Volume 17, Issue 4 (6-2017)
Abstract

Planar inlet concepts play an important role in the design of supersonic propulsion systems. The inlet reduces the speed of supersonic flow by the oblique shock wave or an array of oblique shock waves and a final normal shock provides the subsonic flow after the throat of the diffuser. In this paper, a design method of Mach 3.0 supersonic multi-ramp inlet is explained, the geometry is designed and simulated by the numerical solver. Designing the inlets for the high supersonic Mach range, between 3 and 5 is very challenging because of the viscosity interactions and the related effects on the propulsive efficiency. The considered inlet in this study is a mixed system which provides the required compression by the combination of the three external ramps and a subsonic diffuser. A computational code calculated the optimum dimensions numerically and a second order CFD solver has simulated the inlet operations by the accuracy of 10E-05. In addition to aerodynamic performance, Advantages and problems of such a combination, development of boundary layer and its interactions with the normal shock and performance of bleeding mechanism are simulated and studied. Finally, this paper presents compact details of design, simulation and viscosity effect of mixed compression surface.
Eiman Bondar Saheby, Ghader Olyaei, Azadeh Kebriaee, Guoping Huang,
Volume 17, Issue 10 (1-2018)
Abstract

In this paper, a hypersonic inlet for operating at Mach 5.0 is designed and analyzed numerically. The main axis of this study is a series of three-dimensional simulations with the accuracy of 10E-06 which are applied to determine the effects of the highly developed boundary layer on the performance of inlet for three different study cases. The basic inlet concept is designed by integration of double ramp compression surface and inlet duct which can reduce the free-stream Mach number to the range of 2.0. The most important factor that it affects the performance of the hypersonic inlet system, is the developed entropy layer on the fuselage of the flight vehicle. Ingestion of this layer results in thermal gradients and pressure recovery losses. The bow shocks at the nose and the leading edges are the main sources of this low kinetic energy layer. Using the k-ω turbulence model in the numerical simulations have resulted in a reliable estimation of the boundary layer. In the current context, shock structures, shock-boundary layer interactions, flow quality at the end of the diffuser and also the effects of using sidewalls on the performance of the hypersonic inlet are the main goals of the simulations and the related results are summarized
Gh. Olyaei, A. Kebriaee ,
Volume 19, Issue 4 (April 2019)
Abstract

The present study was performed to experimentally investigate the regime of the liquid sheet breakup and the effects of dimensionless numbers on the penetration and trajectory of the liquid sheet in cross flow condition. The shadowgraphy technique was applied to study the tests. In this work, the effect of the non-dimensional numbers (momentum ratio and Weber number) were surveyed on the breakup of the liquid sheet. Also, some equations for the injection trajectory, the length, and the height of the jet were presented based on these non-dimensional numbers. The tests were done at atmospheric pressure and temperature, where the Weber number range is from 0.8 to 12.5, the variations of the momentum ratio are from 17.4 to 250, and the changes in the Reynolds number are from 2400 to 10227. Three regimes of jet breakup were observed, defined as column breakup, column-bag breakup, and bag breakup. The Weber number is the most effective parameter in the regime change of the liquid sheet breakup. The results also indicated that the increase in the momentum ratio has a great influence on the depth of penetration of the liquid sheet, but it has a very small effect on the breakup regimes.
 


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