TY - JOUR
T1 - Numerical study on the flow and heat transfer of an integrated transpiration cooling structure composed by octet-truss micro-element-various porosity and multi-arrangement
AU - Bai, Xiaohui
AU - Li, Yuxi
AU - Duan, Chengao
AU - Liu, Cunliang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Elsevier Ltd. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
PY - 2026/4
Y1 - 2026/4
N2 - AbstractTo address the thermal protection challenges in the high-heat-load environment of afterburners, this research proposes a novel thermal protection structure based on an octet truss microlattice array. The impact mechanisms of key geometric parameters such as porosity, pore size and structural thickness on the overall cooling effectiveness, effective gas film degree and the overall thermal protection performance of transpiration structures are systematically researched. In response to the non-uniform outflow characteristics of the coolant, two design strategies with variable porosity layouts are designed. The research results show that when the porosity is reduced from 58.4% to 47.6%, the overall cooling effectiveness of the wall surface is increased by 2.75%. The effective film cooling effectiveness is primarily impacted by the parameters of the front-section transpiration structure. For transpiration structures of the same size, a higher overall cooling effectiveness in the front section leads to a lower effective film cooling effectiveness in the downstream extended region. When the thickness of the transpiration cooling structure is increased by 50%, the extended effective film cooling effectiveness improves by 28.7%. Furthermore, the strut type of the octet truss significantly affects the thermal protection performance. Under conditions where the cooling air is not extremely abundant, the quadrangular prism strut type demonstrates the best thermal protection performance, albeit with the highest flow resistance. The intermittent transpiration structure can reduce the coolant flow rate by 28.6% while achieving the same cooling effect. This research provides important theoretical support for the design of efficient thermal protection structures.
AB - AbstractTo address the thermal protection challenges in the high-heat-load environment of afterburners, this research proposes a novel thermal protection structure based on an octet truss microlattice array. The impact mechanisms of key geometric parameters such as porosity, pore size and structural thickness on the overall cooling effectiveness, effective gas film degree and the overall thermal protection performance of transpiration structures are systematically researched. In response to the non-uniform outflow characteristics of the coolant, two design strategies with variable porosity layouts are designed. The research results show that when the porosity is reduced from 58.4% to 47.6%, the overall cooling effectiveness of the wall surface is increased by 2.75%. The effective film cooling effectiveness is primarily impacted by the parameters of the front-section transpiration structure. For transpiration structures of the same size, a higher overall cooling effectiveness in the front section leads to a lower effective film cooling effectiveness in the downstream extended region. When the thickness of the transpiration cooling structure is increased by 50%, the extended effective film cooling effectiveness improves by 28.7%. Furthermore, the strut type of the octet truss significantly affects the thermal protection performance. Under conditions where the cooling air is not extremely abundant, the quadrangular prism strut type demonstrates the best thermal protection performance, albeit with the highest flow resistance. The intermittent transpiration structure can reduce the coolant flow rate by 28.6% while achieving the same cooling effect. This research provides important theoretical support for the design of efficient thermal protection structures.
KW - Effective film cooling effectiveness
KW - Octet truss structure
KW - Transpiration cooling
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105034571710
U2 - 10.1016/j.icheatmasstransfer.2026.110570
DO - 10.1016/j.icheatmasstransfer.2026.110570
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105034571710
SN - 0735-1933
VL - 173
JO - International Communications in Heat and Mass Transfer
JF - International Communications in Heat and Mass Transfer
M1 - 110570
ER -