Parametric Study of Shock/Boundary-Layer Interaction and Swirl Metrics in Bleed-Enabled External Compression Intakes
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Flow quality at the engine face, especially total pressure recovery and swirl, is central to the performance and stability of external compression supersonic inlets. Steady-state RANS-based numerical computations are performed to quantify bleed/swirl trade-offs in a single-ramp intake. The CFD simulations were performed first without a bleed system over M∞ = 1.4–1.9 to locate the practical onset of a bleed requirement. The deterioration in pressure recovery and swirl beyond M∞ ≈ 1.6, which is consistent with a pre-shock strength near the turbulent separation threshold, motivated the use of a bleed system. The comparisons with and without the bleed system were performed next at M∞ = 1.6, 1.8, and 1.9 across the operation map parameterized by the flow ratio. The CFD simulations were performed using ANSYS Fluent, with a pressure-based coupled solver with a realizable k-ε turbulence model and enhanced wall treatment. The results provide engine-face distortion metrics using a standardized ring to sector swirl ratio alongside pressure recovery. The results show that bleed removes low-momentum near-wall fluid and stabilizes the terminal–shock interaction, raising pressure recovery and lowering peak swirl and swirl intensity across the map, while extending the stable operating range to a lower flow ratio at a fixed M∞. The analysis delivers a design-oriented linkage between shock/boundary-layer interaction control and swirl: when bleed is applied at and above M∞ = 1.6, the separation footprints shrink and the organized swirl sectors weaken, yielding improved operability with modest bleed fractions.