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Published 1976 | public
Journal Article

Nonlinear behavior of acoustic waves in combustion chambers—I

Abstract

This paper is concerned with the general problem of the nonlinear growth and limiting amplitude of acoustic waves in a combustion chamber. The analysis is intended to provide a formal framework within which practical problems can be treated with a minimum of effort and expense. There are broadly three parts. First, the general conservation equations are expanded in two small parameters, one characterizing the mean flow field and one measuring the amplitude of oscillations, and then combined to yield a nonlinear inhomogeneous wave equation. Second, the unsteady pressure and velocity fields are expressed as syntheses of the normal modes of the chamber, but with unknown time-varying amplitudes. This procedure yields a representation of a general unsteady field as a system of coupled nonlinear oscillators. Finally, the system of nonlinear equations is treated by the method of averaging to produce a set of coupled nonlinear first order differential equations for the amplitudes and phases of the modes. These must be solved numerically, but results can be obtained quite inexpensively. Subject to the approximations used, the analysis is applicable to any combustion chamber. The most interesting applications are probably to solid rockets, liquid rockets, or thrust augmentors on jet engines. The discussion of this report is oriented towards solid propellant rockets.

Additional Information

© 1976, Pergamon Press. Received 25 August 1975; revised 4 March 1976. Available online 26 February 2003. This work was supported partly by Hercules, Inc., Magna, Utah; by the Aerojet Solid Propulsion Co., Sacramento, California; and by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration under the Jet Propulsion Laboratory Contract NAS 7-100. Manuscript received at ASME Headquarters December 2, 1974. Paper No. 75-GT-40.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 21, 2023