(a) After choking, if the pressure p^{\ast } at the throat is larger than the backpressure p_{b}, the flow will expand further downstream as a supersonic stream in the divergent portion of the nozzle. This will continue as long as the backpressure p_{b}, is less than the pressure that will compel the flow to establish a normal shock at the nozzle exit. Therefore, this problem essentially becomes a determination of the backpressure required for the formation of a normal shock at the nozzle exit.
Given:
\frac{A_{e}}{A_{th}}=\frac{24}{10}=2.4
For this area ratio, from the isentropic table, we have
M_{e}=2.4, \frac{p_{e}}{p_{0}}=0.0684
This becomes the upstream Mach number M_{1} for the normal shock at the nozzle exit. Therefore, from the normal shock table (Table A.2 in the Appendix), for M_{1}=2.4,
\frac{p_{2}}{p_{1}}=6.5533
Thus,
p_{2}=6.5533 p_{1}=6.5533 p_{e}, \text { since } p_{e}=p_{1}
=6.5533 \times 0.0684 \times p_{0}
=6.5533 \times 0.0684 \times 300
=134.47 kPa
Hence, the flow in the complete divergent portion of the nozzle will be supersonic in the range of backpressures
0 \leq p_{b} \leq 134.47 kPa
(b) The nozzle exit Mach number will be subsonic when the flow in the entire divergent portion of the nozzle is subsonic or if there is a normal shock in the divergent portion. For this to happen, the given area ratio will have to give a subsonic Mach number at the exit. Thus, for A_{e} / A_{ th }=2.4 from the isentropic table, we get
M_{e}=0.25, \quad \frac{p_{e}}{p_{0}}=0.9575
p_{e}=0.9575 \times 300=287.25 kPa
When p_{b} \geq 287.25 the entire divergent portion of the nozzle is subsonic flow. When p_{b}=134.47 there will be a normal shock at the nozzle exit. Therefore, for the subsonic flow in the divergent portion the backpressure has to be in the range
134.47<p_{b} \leq 287.25 kPa
(c) The throat will be choked for \frac{p_{\text {th }}}{p_{0}} \leq 0.528, thus
p_{\text {th }} \leq 0.528 \times 300
\leq 158.40 kPa
The choked flow will make the flow in the convergent portion frozen for any change in the downstream condition. Therefore, \dot{m} is independent of p_{b} for
0 \leq p_{b} \leq 158.40 kPa
The exit pressure is independent of p_{b} for
0 \leq p_{b} \leq 134.97 kPa
This is because when the entire divergent duct flow is supersonic, for any fixed area ratio A_{e} / A_{ th }, M_{e} is constant and, therefore, for a fixed p_{0} and A_{e} / A_{ th },p_{e} becomes independent of p_{b} as long as the above conditions are maintained.