Nonlinear Dynamics of Wave Mode Transition in a Hydrogen-Fueled Rotating Detonation Engine
POSTER
Abstract
We present a nonlinear dynamical analysis of wave mode transition in a hydrogen-fueled rotating detonation engine (RDE) combustor based on high-fidelity simulations validated against experiments from the Air Force Research Laboratory. The simulations capture the transition from a sustained single detonation wave to a sustained double co-rotating wave structure when the fuel and oxidizer mass flow rates are varied while maintaining a global equivalence ratio near unity. The predicted detonation wave frequencies are in close agreement with experimental data: 3.95 kHz (CFD) vs. 3.69 kHz (experiment) for single-wave mode, and 7.73 kHz vs. 7.37 kHz for the double-wave mode, with errors under 7%. To characterize the nonlinear dynamics during this mode transition, we analyze pressure time series extracted from several numerical probes placed along axial and azimuthal directions within the combustor. Using time-delay embedding, we reconstruct the phase-space dynamics and compute nonlinear invariants such as Poincaré sections, correlation dimension, and Lyapunov exponents. Preliminary results indicate an apparent transition from periodic to quasi-periodic or low-dimensional chaotic behavior as the second detonation wave is established within the combustor, suggesting that detonation mode bifurcation is governed by nonlinear interactions between pressure waves, fuel-air mixing, heat release, and combustion dynamics. These insights can inform the design of more stable and efficient RDEs by enabling control over wave mode transitions and improving combustor operability.
Presenters
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Steven Thompson
University of Central Florida
Authors
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Steven Thompson
University of Central Florida
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Reetesh Ranjan
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
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Veeraraghava Raju Hasti
University of Central Florida