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MEMORANDUM - digital.library.unt.edu/67531/metadc52876/m2/1/high... · case of turbulent flow, ... angle between free stream and normal to surface of nose ... only an example but

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RESEARCH MEMORANDUM

LOCAL HEAT TO BLUNT NOSES

AT HIGH SUPERSONIC SPEEDS

By W i l l i a m E. Stoney, Jr.

SUMMARY

A brief summary i s presented of the recent theoret ical and experi- mental work on loca l heat-transfer ra tes on blunt-nose bodies. Compari- sons of theoret ical and measured heating ra tes indicate the following conclusions: The calculation of l oca l conditions over noses of high radius of curvature needs more study and tes t ing a t the present time. If loca l flow conditions are known, the laminar heating r a t e s over the whole nose shape can be calculated within most engineering accuracy requirements fo r the whole range of Mach numbers up t o 13.8. case of turbulent flow, turbulent f la t -plate theory based on loca l flow properties can provide good estimates of the heating rates possible. The prediction of t rans i t ion remains a t present the biggest unknown.

For the

INTRODUCTION

The importance of blunt-nose shapes has increased i n recent years because such shapes have many advantages i n comparison with the more common sharp-nose shapes for missiles having high heating rates . High drag is sometimes desirable f o r b a l l i s t i c missiles and does not penalize the t o t a l efficiency of these missiles since they operate a t essent ia l ly drag-free a l t i tudes for the major par t of t h e i r f l i g h t . erence 1, extremely blunt noses develop lower t o t a l heating ra tes than do sharp noses of about the same s ize and weight. most importantly, there are many indications that extremely blunt shapes fos te r longer runs of laminar flow than do sharp shapes.

A s shown i n re f -

Finally, and perhaps

For these reasons the calculation of the loca l heating ra tes on such shapes has become extremely important. summary of present-day techniques and their effectiveness. This s m a r y together with the attached l i s t of references should be helpful t o those orienting themselves i n t h i s fast-changing f i e l d .

The present paper gives a brief

CONFIDENTIAL

2

SYMBOLS

pressure coefficient

surface distance measured from stagnation point

Mach number

pressure

heating rate , Btu/( sec) (sq f t )

free-stream Reynolds number based on body diameter

base radius

nose radius o r radius of curvature

surface distance from stagnation point t o junction of hemisphere and cylinder; on f la t face, distance from stagnation point t o edge, t ha t is, cylinder radius

T temperature, OF

X distance along center l i n e measured from apex of nose

e P viscosity of air

P density of air

Subscripts:

"Is hemispherical nose

2 loca l

W based on temperature of w a l l surface

0 at stagnation point

m f ree stream

angle between f ree stream and normal t o surface of nose

CONI?IDENTIAL

DISCUSSION

Calculation of Local Flow Conditions

Before any attempt can be made t o calculate heat-transfer rates, the loca l flow conditions m u s t be calculated. B l u n t noses can be classi- f i e d roughly in to two groups: those for which the Newtonian flow concept (Cp,z/Cp,~ = cos20) i s applicable and thus f o r which the l o c a l conditions

can be eas i ly calculated, and those fo r which the Newtonian flow concept is not applicable and for which no simple solutions ex is t .

A rough boundary can be fixed between these two groups of nose shapes by consideration of a ser ies of noses having constant radii of curvature. Such a ser ies is i l l u s t r a t ed i n figure 1; t h i s se r ies progresses from the hemispherical nose on the l e f t t o the f l a t nose ( i n f i n i t e radius) on the r igh t . The intermediate case for t h i s series would be the nose shown i n the center - the nose for which, according t o Newtonian theory, the flow j u s t before the corner i s a t a Mach number of 1. Until s t r i c t e r c r i t e r i a are provided, Newtonian calculations should be checked with experiment o r with a more comprehensive theory for noses having a radius of curva-

a t the stagnation point greater than &be Recently, several theo- r e t i c a l approaches have been presented t o the blunt-nose problem. (See re fs . 2 t o 5; theories presented in refs. 4 and 5 may also be found i n appendix D of r e f . 6.) Some of these appear t o be promising, but more experience with them i s needed before their general usefulness can be determined.

This paper considers only shapes whose loca l conditions are known. Experimental data and theoret ical resu l t s are applied t o the hemispherical and the f l a t noses t o bring out the following points:

(1) If the r a t e of change of velocity at the stagnation point is known, the heat-transfer ra te a t t h i s point can be calculated accurately enough for most engineering purposes.

(2) With the proper pressure dis t r ibut ion the l a m i n a heating r a t e s over the en t i r e nose can be calculated sa t i s fac tor i ly , and reasonably good estimates of the possible turbulent heating r a t e s can be made.

Predict ion of S t agnat ion- Po int He at i n g Rat e s

The prediction of stagnation-point heating r a t e s i s well proved fo r the lower Mach number range and needs demonstration only at the higher Mach numbers where r e a l gas effects come in to play.

C O N F I D E N T U

In figure 2 the ra t ios of measured stagnation-point heating r a t e s t o theoretical calculations are presented as functions of free-stream Mach number. X-17 rocket having a nose defined by the equation r / rb = (x/2r&3 ( r e f . 6 ) , a f la t - face NACA rocket model, and AVCO shock-tube experi- ments ( r e f . 7 ) . time history fo r the f l i gh t , the lower portion being t h a t f o r the acceler- ating pa r t of the f l i g h t and the upper portion representing the deceler- ating Mach numbers. values a t any given Mach number i s probably a measure of the t e s t accuracy rather than a r e a l e f fec t due t o the higher Reynolds numbers of the deceler- ation portion of the f l i g h t path.

The t e s t resu l t s were obtained from a f l i g h t of the Lockheed

The curves f o r the rocket data represent the Mach number

The difference between accelerating and decelerating

The theoret ical heating ra tes were calculated by the stagnation- point theory of Fay and Riddell ( r e f . 8) f o r the equilibrium boundary layer with a Prandtl number of 0.71 and a L e w i s number of 1.4. The gen- e r a l conclusion t o be derived from this figure i s tha t , although the scat ter shown indicates that many deta i l s of the heat-transfer processes under these high-temperature conditions are s t i l l unknown, the agreement of these data i s close enough s o that it can be f e l t t h a t t he i r general nature i s understood.

Calculation of Heating Rates Over Entire Nose

I n the calculation of heating ra tes over the en t i r e nose, the stagnation-point heat-transfer ra tes of the hemispherical noses are used as datum points, and a l l the data and calculations are presented as ra t ios of these values.

Figure 3 presents the ra t ios of loca l laminar heating ra tes on a hemispherical nose t o stagnation heating ra tes plot ted as functions of posit ion along the surface of the hemisphere. The t e s t points are f o r a variety of conditions from and free-stream Reynolds numbers based on diameter of 1.0 x lo6 t o 14.3 x lo6. and M = 3.9 are presented i n r e f . 9; data fo r M = 6.8 i n r e f . 10; and data f o r M = 2.5 i n r e f . 11.) Good agreement with the theoret ical distributions, which were calculated by the method of Lees ( r e f . 1 2 ) , can be seen immediately. It i s important t o notice tha t the dis t r ibut ion of heating ra tes does not vary markedly with Mach number.

M, = 2 t o 6.8 (Data for M = 2

Another interest ing condition indicated b the data i n figure 3 i s the extremely high Reynolds number (14.3 x 106y fo r which laminar flow w a s obtained i n one f l i g h t t e s t . This model, however, w a s a special case f o r which extreme pains were taken t o obtain a mirror f in i sh on the nose of the order of 2 microinches - not an idea l process f o r assembly-line fabrication.

CONFIDENTIAL

Similar agreement with test results can be shown f o r the other extreme i n the series of nose shapes - the perfect ly f la t face. ure 4 the l o c a l heating rates w e r e not divided by the f la t - face stagnation heating rates but by the appropriate hemispherical stagnation heating rates. This allows a d i rec t comparison of the f la t and hemispherical values. The so l id l ine gives the theoretical laminar results f o r the f l a t face by the method of Lees (ref. 12); and the dashed l i n e above it, the same r a t i o calculated by the method of Stine and Wanlass (ref . 13). The la t ter calculations differ from Lees' because they include a correc- t i on f o r the e f f ec t of pressure gradient. (For the re la t ive ly low pres- sure gradients of the hemisphere, the two methods agree closely.) be seen from the figure the agreement with e i the r theory is reasonably good and the uncertainties i n the measurements do not permit a choice between t h e m .

I n f ig -

As can

Since the f la t nose i s a shape f o r which Newtonian flow concepts do not work a t a l l , a pressure-ratio distribution pz/po obtained experi- mentally at a Mach number of 2 (see a l so theoret ical dis t r ibut ion of re f . 14) w a s assumed t o be constant f o r all higher Mach numbers and w a s used i n the theoret ical calculations. The agreement of the data, which cover Mach numbers from 2 t o 13.8, indicates that this approximation w a s adequate f o r this case. (Data were obtained f o r M = 2 i n the pre- f l i g h t j e t and f o r M = 13.8 i n f ree f l i g h t at the Langley P i lo t less Aircraft Research Station a twal lops , Island, Va. , and data f o r M = 5 were determined i n an investigation o f 2-inch f la t - face cylinders con- ducted by Morton Cooper i n the Mach number 3 &symmetric blowdown j e t a t the Langley G a s Dynamics Branch.)

What i s gained by the f la t face i n lower loca l heating r a t e s in the center i s l o s t a t i t s edge. However, it m u s t be remembered tha t high local heating rates are not necessarily the c r i t i c a l points i n a par t ic - ular design, as can be shown by the time his tory of temperature prof i les on the f ron t and side of the f la t - face rocket model on which the heat@ r a t e s a t a Mach number of 13.8 were obtained. and a sketch of the nose are presented i n f igure 3. copper and was three-sixteenths of an inch thick on the f ront and one- eighth of an inch thick at the sides. The datum points represent the temperatures as measured along the front surface and down the side f o r three d i f fe ren t times during the high Mach number par t of the f l i gh t . A t the e a r l i e s t time not much heating has occurred and the temperature prof i le i s re la t ive ly f l a t . t i o n i n the skin can be seen since the highest temperature is reached at 0.82/s i n sp i t e of the peak heating which occurs a t the corner. The reason t h a t the sides are able t o act as good heat sinks l i e s i n t h e i r extremely low heating rates . two s ide thermocouples are shown in figure 4. model has slowed down t o a Mach number of 7, and the lateral flow of heat i n the skin w a s so large tha t the maximum temperature of the f l i g h t

These temperature prof i les The nose w a s made of

A t peak Mach number the e f fec ts of conduc-

Measurements of these ra tes f o r the first Seven seconds l a t e r , the

occurred i n the center of the model - not a t the corners. This is, of course, only an example but it does show t h a t a f a i r l y de ta i led study of the par t icular nose m u s t be m a d e i f i t s effectiveness i s t o be evalu- ated correctly.

There are some indications ( fo r example, r e f . 1) t h a t f l a t noses or closely a l l i e d shapes may have some advantages i n re ta ining l a m i n a r flow, and, as is shown, on a hemispherical nose t h i s re tent ion can be very important since turbulent heating ra tes can be very high. I n f ig- ure 6 the r a t io s of l oca l heating r a t e s t o stagnation heating rates are presented as functions of surface location. The tes t points were deter- mined f rom & investigation conducted by Ivan E. Beckwith and James J. Gallagher i n a blowdown j e t at the Langley G a s Dynamics Branch. For t h i s investigation a Mach number of 2 and free-stream Reynolds num- bers (based on body diameter) of 2.7 x 106 and 3.4 x 106 were used. Transition obviously took place forward on the hemisphere f o r both t e s t s

and heating ra tes nearly 2- times the stagnation r a t e were reached. The

sol id l i n e represents f l a t -p l a t e turbulent values based on the loca l Reynolds numbers around the body. This comparison and s i m i l a r compari- sons from other t e s t s indicates t h a t even t h i s r e l a t ive ly crude theore t i - c a l approach may have considerable value in estimating the turbulent heating rates .

1 2

(See also ref. 15 and appendix C of r e f . 6. )

CONCLUDING REMARKS

The calculation of the loca l flow conditions over noses of high radius of curvature needs more investigation at the present time, although data obtained i n l o w Mach number t e s t s may be adequate at much higher Mach numbers for use i n these calculations. However, i f the loca l conditions a re known, the laminar heating ra tes over the whole nose shape can be calculated within most engineering accuracy requirements f o r t he whole range of Mach numbers up t o a t l e a s t 13.8.

For turbulent flow, f l a t -p l a t e theory may provide good estimates of the heating ra tes possible. O f course, the prediction of t r ans i t i on s t i l l remains and i s the biggest unknown at the present t i m e .

Langley Aeronautical Laboratory, National Advisory Committee f o r Aeronautics,

Langley Field, V a . , March 6, 1357.

CONFIDENTIAL

7

1. Allen, H. Julian, and Eggers, A. J., Jr.: A Study of the Motion and Aerodynamic Heating of Missiles Entering the Earth 's Atmosphere at H i g h Supersonic Speeds. NACA RM A53D28, 1953.

2. Maslen, Stephen H., and Moeckel, W. E.: Inviscid Hypersonic Flow Past Blunt Bodies. Sci. , Jan. 1957.

Preprint No. 665, S.M.F. Fund Preprint, Inst. Aero.

3. Probstein, Ronald F.: Inviscid Flow i n the Stagnation Point Region of Very Blunt-Nosed Bodies at Hypersonic Flight Speeds. TN 56-59? (Contract No. AF 33(616)-2798), Wright A i r Dev. Center, U. S. Air Force, Sept. 1956. No- m97273.)

WADC

(Also available from ASTIA as Doc.

4. Hayes, Wallace D.: Some Aspects of Hypersonic Flow. The Ramo-Wooldridge Corp., Jan. 4, 1953.

5. Hayes, Wallace D.: Hypersonic Flow Fields at Small Density Ratio. Doc. No. 34, The Ramo-Wooldridge Corp., May 12, 1953.

6. Anon. : X-17 Re-Entry Test Vehicle - R-3 Final Flight Report. Rep. No. ED-3013 (Contract No. AF 04 (645)-7), Lockheed Aircraft Corp., oct . 31, 1956.

7. Rose, P. H., and Stark, W. I.: Stagnation Point Heat Transfer Mea- surements i n Air a t High Temperature. ~ e c . 11, 1956.

Res. Note 24, AVCO Res. Lab.,

8. Fay, J. A., and Riddell, F. R.: Stagnation Point Heat Transfer i n Dissociated Air. Res. Note 18, AVCO Res. Lab., June 1956.

9. Garland, Benjamine J., and Chauvin, Leo T.: Measurements of Heat Transfer and Boundary-Layer Transition on an 8-Inch-Diameter Hemi- sphere Cylinder i n Free Flight f o r a Mach Number R a n g e of 2.0 t o 3.88. NACA RM L57D04a, 1957.

10. Crawford, Davis H., and McCauley, W i l l i a m D.: Investigation of the Laminar Aerodynamic Heat-Transfer Characteristics of a Hemisphere- Cylinder i n the Langley 11-Inch Hypersonic Tunnel a t a Mach Number of 6.8. NACA TN 3706, 1956.

11. B u g l i a , James J.: Heat Transfer and Boundary-Layer Transition on a Highly Polished Hemisphere-Cone i n Free Flight a t Mach Numbers Up

t o 3.14 and Reynolds Numbers Up t o 24 x 10 6 . NACA RM L57DO5, 1957.

CONFIDENTIAL

12. Lees, Lester: Laminar Heat Transfer Over Blunt-Nosed Bodies at Hy-per- sonic Flight Speeds. PP- 259-269-

Jet Propulsion, vol. 26, no. 4, Apr. 1956,

13. Stine, Howard A., and Wanlass, Kent: Theoretical and Experimental Investigation of Aerodynamic-Heating and Isothermal Heat Transfer Parameters on a Hemispherical Nose With Laminar Boundary Layer at Supersonic Mach Numbers. NACA TN 3344, 1954.

14. Maccoll, J. W., and Codd, J.: Theoretical Investigations of the Flow Around Various Bodies in the Sonic Region of Velocities. British Theoretical Res. Rep. No. 17/45, B.A.R.C. 45/19, Ministry of Supply, Armament Res. Dept., 1943.

15. Van Driest, E. R.: The Problem of Aerodynamic Heating. Aero. Eng. Ref., vol. 15, no. 10, Oct. 1956, pp. 26-41.

CONFIDENTIAL

BLUNT-NOSE FLOW FIELDS

r S O N l C LINE

Figure 1

coMF#RIsoN OF MEASURED AND CALCULATED STAGNATION HEAT-TRANSFER RATES

q,, qcALc

I LNACA ROCKET

1 I I 1 I J

2 4 6 8 IO 12 14 0

Ma3

Figure 2

CONFIDENTIAL

LAMINAR HEATING RATES ON HEMIZPHERICAL NOSES

Mar, Rm,d TEST 0 2.0 2.7x106 ROCKET 0 2.5 14.3 ROCKET A 3.9 5.1 ROCKET V 6.8 1.0 TUNNEL

1.2 r

0 .2 .4 .6 .8 1.0 1 /s

Figure 3

LAMINAR HEATING RATES ON A FLAT-FACE CYLINDER

0 5 4.6 TUNNEL 0 13.8 1.4 ROCKET

/I

LAMINAR

I I I I I I i o l n l 0 .2 .4 .6 .8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6

u s

Figure 4

CONFIDENTIAL

TEMPERATURE HISTORY ON FACE AND SIDES OF ROCKET MODEL

T,OF

1,400 -

1,200 -

1,000 -

600 -

0 .2 .4 .6 .8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 22 2.4 2.6 l / S

Figure 3

TURBULENT HEATING RATES ON A HEMISPHERICAL NOSE TUNNEL TESTS AT M,=2

4 40 0 3.4

LOCAL TURBULENT

Figure 6

C ONF IDENTIAL NACA - Langley Field, Va.