3,517 research outputs found

    Instability of a supersonic shock free elliptic jet

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a comparison of the measured and the computed spatial stability properties of an aspect ratio 2 supersonic shock free elliptic jet. The shock free nature of the elliptic jet provides an ideal test of validity of modeling the large scale coherent structures in the initial mixing region of noncircular supersonic jets with linear hydrodynamic stability theory. Both aerodynamic and acoustic data were measured. The data are used to compute the mean velocity profiles and to provide a description of the spatial composition of pressure waves in the elliptic jet. A hybrid numerical scheme is applied to solve the Rayleigh problem governing the inviscid linear spatial stability of the jet. The measured mean velocity profiles are used to provide a qualitative model for the cross sectional geometry and the smooth velocity profiles used in the stability analysis. Computational results are presented for several modes of instability at two jet cross sections. The acoustic measurements show that a varicose instability is the jet's perferred mode of motion. The stability analysis predicts that the Strouhal number varies linearly as a function of axial distance in the jet's initial mixing region, which is in good qualitative agreement with previous measurements

    Shock-free supersonic elliptic nozzles and method of forming same

    Get PDF
    A method of forming a shock-free supersonic elliptic nozzle, in which the nozzle to be designed is divided into three sections, a circular-to-elliptic section which begins at a circular nozzle inlet, an elliptic subsonic section downstream from the circular-to-elliptic section, and a supersonic section downstream from the elliptic subsonic section is described. The maximum and minimum radii for each axial point in the circular-to-elliptic section and the elliptic subsonic section are then separately determined, the maximum and minimum radii being the radii for the widest part of an elliptic cross-section and the narrowest part of the elliptic cross-section, respectively. The maximum and minimum radii for each axial point in the supersonic section are determined based on the Method of Characteristics. Then, each of the three sections are based on the maximum and minimum radii for each axial point in the section. The resulting nozzle is acoustically superior

    Ambient melting behavior of stoichiometric uranium oxides

    Get PDF
    As UO2 is easily oxidized during the nuclear fuel cycle it is important to have a detailed understanding of the structures and properties of the oxidation products. Experimental work over the years has revealed many stable uranium oxides including UO2, U4O9 (UO2.25), U3O7 (UO2.33), U2O5 (UO2.5), U3O8 (UO2.67), and UO3, all with a number of different polymorphs. These oxides are broadly split into two categories, fluorite-based structures with stoichiometries in the range of UO2 to UO2.5 and less dense layered-type structures with stoichiometries in the range of UO2.5 to UO3. While UO2 is well characterized, both experimentally and computationally, there is a paucity of data concerning higher stoichiometry oxides in the literature. In this work we determine the ambient melting points of all the six stoichiometric uranium oxides listed above and compare them to the available experimental and/or theoretical data. We demonstrate that a family of the six ambient melting points map out a solid-liquid transition boundary consistent with the high-temperature portion of the phase diagram of uranium-oxygen system suggested by Babelot et al
    corecore