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Transcript of Hypersonic Flight_Dora_Musielak_2016
Hypersonic Travel A Game-Changing Technology
Dora E. Musielak, Ph.D.
University of Texas at Arlington - UTA Aerospace Professional Speaker Series 28 September 2016
Contact Author: [email protected]
Hypersonic Transport
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SST Mach 2.2 HST Mach 7
Hypersonic Missiles
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60 miles per minute
Rapid response to time-critical targets. JP-fueled engine would enable a medium-size rapid response ISR vehicle with operationally- relevant range capability. Hypersonic missile offers advantage of flexible recall and en route re-direction. Global fast-reaction reconnaissance missions.
Lockheed HSSW
X-51A
Hypersonic Air-Breathing Flight: Highlights
• Hypersonic Air-Breathing Propulsion (HAP) Technology
– Dual-Mode Scramjet
• DARPA/USAF Military Programs
– From X-51A to HAWC and SR-72
• NASA Reusable SLV Concept: TSTO TBCC
• Europe: Skylon and HST
• Critical Technologies and Needed Breakthroughs
– Research Topics
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Aerothermodynamics-Propulsion
Aerothermodynamic performance cannot be decoupled from propulsion performance due to shared surfaces and flow field interactions.
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Forebody Shaping, Shock Structure and Boundary-Layer State Impact Engine Mass Capture and Combustor Performance
Variable Geometry Dual-Mode Scramjet Operation
Exhaust Plume and Nozzle Expansion Impact Vehicle Pitching Moments and TPS
Exhaust Plume Interaction with Airframe, Control Surfaces
Mach 7 CFD Model Image: NASA
Scramjet Propulsion 5 < M < 15
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Combustion
0
External
Compression
1
Internal
Compression
(Isolator)
3 4 8 9
Internal
Expansion External
Expansion
Expansion Compression
0 3 Adiabatic Compression
30 TT
3 4 Isobaric heat addition
43 TT
4 9 Adiabatic Expansion
94 TT
Freestream condition
Capture
area A0
0M 9AFuel injection
Air-breathing Engine No Turbo-compressor To produce static thrust, scramjet requires ram compression, i.e., forward flight speed
)( 090 VVmF
Air-Breathing Propulsion Challenge
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Scramjet engine has a much more challenging task than rockets. Consider flight at an optimum dynamic pressure:
2
2
00
Vq
Mass flow ingested by inlet
0
000000
2
V
AqVAm
Inlet capture area A0 varies slightly with Mach number and angle of attack. As cruise velocity increases , mass flow decreases reducing thrust .
This is why scramjet engine has to occupy a large fraction of vehicle’s cross-section area.
Mach 10 vehicle needs ~ 80% of its frontal area to capture air (subsonic airliner needs only 25%, and Mach 3 airplane uses about 40%).
)( 090 VVmF
Air-breathing Propulsion Performance
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X-51
X-43A
f
ABsp
mg
FI
0
Specific Impulse
)s(spI
090 VVmFAB
Scramjet Critical Elements of Feasibility
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Compression and expansion processes are very critical to overall propulsion system performance. We estimate velocity ratios implied by Isp
fg
VVMa
fg
VVV
fmg
FI sp
0
0900
0
090
00
1/1/
For M0 > 5 scramjets operate ~ stoichiometrically. With H2 fuel f = 0.0293
sp
spI
MMa
gI
V
V
000
0
0
9 00096.00293.01
0V9V
0M
10
9 V
V
Fractional velocity change across engine is very small as M0 > 6. A small inefficiency in nozzle or inlet could have large consequences for overall scramjet engine performance. Efficient Inlets and nozzles are essential for scramjet propulsion
Compression Expansion
090 VVmF
Fuel Energy
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Fuel is characterized by its energy content per unit mass. Heat of reaction hPR represents (ideal) fuel energy density, i.e., fuel thermal energy per unit mass of fuel.
Fuel hPR (BTU/lbm) hPR (kJ/kg)
Hydrogen, H2 51,571 119,954
Methane, CH4 21,502 50,010
Ethane, C2H6 20,416 47,484
Octane, C8H18 19,256 44,786
JP-4 18,400 42,798
JP-7 18,702 43,500 Rate at which chemical reactions make energy available to engine cycle is
PRf hmrateenergy Chemical
Overall efficiency of HAP cycle:
PRf hm
FV
0
0rateenergy Chemical
PowerThrust
Due to volume limitations, entirety of available hPR cannot be realized. Burner efficiency represents it
iPR
aPR
bh
h
,
,
Heat addition in burner:
PRbin hfhhq 34
)(HkJ/kg1014.1 2
5 inq
7)-(JPkJ/kg1013.4 4 inq
Fuel/Air Ratio, f
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Fuel/air ratio, indicator of combustion conditions 0m
mf
f
General chemical equation for HCF + air indicates all carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms are consumed in chemical reaction, yielding as products carbon dioxide and water:
22222421
79
221
79
4N
yxOH
yxCONO
yxHC yx
yx
yx
m
mf
f
st
4103
336
0
For hydrogen fuel, x = 0 and y = 2, stoichiometric fuel/air ratio 0291.0stf
Ideal upper limit of fuel/air ratio is known as stoichiometric fuel/air ratio. It represents condition where complete combustion of oxygen and fuel takes place.
For JP-7 fuel, x = 12.5 and y = 26, stoichiometric fuel/air ratio 06745.0stf
Specific Impulse of Hypersonic Propulsion
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111
2/1
00
0
0
t
inKEsp
h
qf
gf
VI
Overall propulsion kinetic energy efficiency
KEnozzlerKEcombustoKEinletKE 0
Heat added per unit mass fuel PRbin hfq
Curran, et al., 1991
Kinetic energy efficiency must be determined accounting for real gas effects and nonequilibrium chemical reaction effects, very important in both combustors and nozzles.
KEOK
Stoichiometric combustion
PRbin hfhhq 34
)(HkJ/kg1014.1 2
5 inq
7)-(JPkJ/kg1013.4 4 inq8 M
Engine-Vehicle Integration
• Proper aerodynamic integration of propulsion system with vehicle is required for efficient hypersonic flight. This includes integration of vehicle structures, material, thermal management, controls, and subsystems.
• To capture required airflow, it is necessary to use entire forebody underneath vehicle as compression surface, shaping it for high efficiency.
• Entire afterbody underneath vehicle must be used as a free expansion surface.
• Entire vehicle underside must be carefully designed to satisfy engine performance under all flight conditions. Bottom of vehicle becomes an integral part of propulsion system.
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Shock Shock
Compression
Engine
Forebody/Inlet Afterbody/Exhaust
X-30 National Aerospace Plane (NASP) Studies 1987 - 1995
X-43A Hypersonic Experimental Vehicle
16 Nov. 2004, it reached a cruise speed of Mach 9.6 on H2 fuel. Total flight time: 12 seconds
X-51A Waverider
On May 1, 2013, it reached a cruise speed of Mach 5.1 on HC fuel. Total flight time: 210 seconds
Heritage HAP Technology
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HRE Program 1964 - 1974
Testing and Studies: Australia HyShot Russia CIAM •GASL projectile …….. .. more
NASA X-43A M10 Vehicle
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Goal: Demonstrate, validate and advance technology for hypersonic aircraft powered by an airframe-integrated scramjet engine.
Flight History -Flight 1: Mach 7 Target, June 2, 2001 Booster Failure -Flight 2: Mach 6.91, March 27, 2004 Fully Successful -Flight 3: Mach 9.68, Nov. 16, 2004 Fully Successful
First Flight of scramjet powered vehicle. ─ Demonstrated H2 burn, attained high flight Mach number, non-symmetrical stage separation (required for TSTO)
WEIGHT: 3,000 lbs / 1400 kg Image: NASA
NASA X-43A Project
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Mach 9.65 Flight Nov 2004
Three-flight Project (scaled Mach 10 cruiser) 2 at Mach 7, power-on test 11 seconds* 1 at Mach 10
Air launched on a highly modified Pegasus booster 7 year project (1996 – 2004) ~ $230 M investment Second flight demonstrated scramjets can ignite at Mach 6.83, fly at 94,000 ft (28.7 km) altitude. Third flight maximum Mach 9.68, ~ 7 seconds
Image: NASA
X-51 WaveRider Mach 5
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Cruiser Length: 168 in ( 4.26 m), Max. Width: 23 in ( 0.58 m)
Stack Length: 301 in ( 7.6 m)
Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne Scramjet SJY61, Ethylene and JP-7 Fuel
X-51A WaveRider Flight Test
18
X-51A scramjet-powered waverider made hypersonic history on 26 May 2010. Vehicle soared at Mach 5 for over 3 minutes, setting a new hypersonic world record.
Stack Length: 26 ft (7.6 m) Empty weight: 4,000 lb (1,814 kg) Scramjet: P&W Rocketdyne SJY61 Fuel: JP-7 (270 lbm) Maximum speed: Mach 7+
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Scramjet can produce 400 to 1000 lb of thrust, capable of accelerating more than 6437 km/h (4000 mph)
X-51A Scramjet Engine Demonstrator
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Flight History 1st Flight – 26 May 2010: 143-second burn to Mach 5. Perfect flight would have lasted 100-sec more and accelerated cruiser to Mach 6. Thermal seal breach at nozzle interface caused hot gases to leak. 2nd Flight – 13 June 2011: Booster to Mach 5. Scramjet lit, failed to transition to full power 3rd Flight – 14 August 2012: Fin Failure 4th Flight – 1 May 2013: 210-second combustion to Mach 5.1 and Parameter ID Maneuvers (Glide)
Scramjet Inlet Design
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Critical Aerothermodynamics
Viscous
Interaction
Aerodynamic
Heating
Shock Wave /
Boundary Layer
Viscous Interaction
(SWBLI) Inlet Unstart
Inlet Spillage/BL
Ingestion
Bow Shock/Cowl
Shock Interaction
Jet
Interaction
Entropy Layer
Swallowing
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Hypersonic Aerodynamic environment is extremely harsh and hypersonic vehicles function near edge of system capability.
Boundary Layer Transition
X-43A Coping with Aerodynamic Heating
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At M < 7, horizontal tail leading edges 2600°F (1400 °C) and nose 2000°F (1090 C°) At Mach 10, Tw ~ 3600°F (1900°C)
Leading edge protection
Second X-43A vehicle, being mounted under right wing of B-52B launch aircraft. Source: NASA DFRC Photo.
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Source: McClinton, 2006
Maximum working Temperatures Titanium alloys: 1600R (890 K) Superalloys: 1800R (1000 K) Metal matrix composites: 4500R Coated C-C composites: 5400R (3000 K)
Adiabatic wall temperatures in hypersonic flight can reach 5,000-15,000R (2778-8333 K)
TPS Cooling Requirements
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For thermal protection system we need to know whether existing fuel flow rate is sufficient to satisfy total cooling requirements.
Total rate at which fuel can remove thermal energy
hfc is amount of thermal energy that can be absorbed by unit mass of fuel.
Assuming that most heat is due to turbulent flow, total rate at which heat must be removed from engine surfaces (required cooling)
Ratio of available fuel cooling to required fuel cooling:
For a balanced system
Physical heat absorption capacities of hydrocarbon aerospace fuels crucial for cooling
fcff hmQ
0
5/1
0
5/11
005/1
0
2
000
A
A
q
VmA
V
VVAqQ w
wwwr
w
fc
r
f
A
A
V
q
K
hf
Q
Q0
5/11
0
5/1
0
0
5/1
0
5/11
0
A
A
q
VKhf w
fc
Fuel Cooling Properties
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Physical heat absorbed by standard aerospace fuels in going from tank conditions to 1000 K (1800 °R). In all cases, fuel is stored in liquid state and heated to vapor state before injecting into engine flowpath as a gas.
Hydrogen is best engine coolant for hypersonic vehicles. Costs and logistic complexities of cryogenic hydrogen, as well as exceedingly low density force us to consider conventional hydrocarbon fuels such as JP-7 for lower hypersonic flight regime. JP-7 has better heat absorption than JP-8, and produces more of gaseous products that reduce ignition times.
Fuel Liquid Density
lbm/ft3 (kg/m3)
fst Physical heat
absorption hfc
BTU/lbm (kJ/kg)
fsthfc
BTU/lbm (kJ/kg)
Hydrogen, H2 4.74 (75.9) 0.0291 6500 (15,100) 189 (440)
Methane, CH4 18.7 (300) 0.0583 1460 (3400) 85.1 (198)
JP-7, C12.5H26 49.5 (793) 0.0675 860 (2000) 58.0 (135)
Current HAP Military Programs
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DARPA/USAF Hypersonic Air-breathing Weapon Concept (HAWC) flight demonstration of critical technologies for effective and affordable air-launched hypersonic cruise missiles, hydrocarbon scramjet-powered propulsion to enable sustained hypersonic cruise. Lockheed SR-72, unmanned, TBCC Mach 6 aircraft intended for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance envisioned to succeed SR-71 Blackbird.
USAF/Lockheed Martin’s High Speed Strike Weapon (HSSW) hypersonic missile. Image Credit: Lockheed Martin Co.
SR-72 twin-engine TBCC aircraft designed for a Mach 6 cruise. Image Credit: Lockheed Martin Co.
Spaceplanes: Ground to Orbit
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Chemical Propulsion
28
Air Breathing
(Brayton Cycle)
Rockets (Brayton Cycle)
Gas Turbine Engines No Rotor Engines
Turbo- fan
Turbo- jet
Pulse- jet
Ramjet and Scramjet
All Rockets
Turbofan + AB
Turbojet + AB
Hybrid or Combined Cycle Engine
Turbofan + Ramjet
Turbojet + Ramjet
Turbo-Rocket
Ram-Rocket
Rocket-Scramjet
Pre-Cooled Air Cycle Engine Synergetic Air-Breathing and
Rocket Engine (SABRE)
Rocket
ee VmF
)(0 oe VVmF
Scramjet
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75% of weight at lift off was propellant, and of this, 83% was oxidant (mLOX= 1.3 million lbm)
Combined Cycle Propulsion
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• TBCC
• Turbine-Based Combined Cycle (TBCC) use turbine engines (TE) to boost the vehicle to takeover (TO) speed.
• TEs are mounted in separate ducts to facilitate cocooning to isolate them from high enthalpy flow of hypersonic speeds. TBCC uses high specific impulse (Isp) TE booster for subsonic operation.
• Substantial data from testing, analysis, and conceptual studies.
• RBCC
• Rocket-Based Combined Cycle (RBCC) Engines have a rocket as primary propulsion element to boost the vehicle to TO speed.
• Ejector rockets behave both as a rocket for producing static thrust, and also as a ramjet because inlet air is compressed and burned with fuel to produce thrust.
• Fully integrated with one single flowpath.
• Limited data but substantial predictions based on conceptual studies.
NASA Two-Stage to Orbit (TSTO) TBCC
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Booster: TBCC propulsion
Orbiter: all-rocket propulsion
0 < M < 3 Turbine w/rocket boost for takeoff 3 < M < 8 Dual-Mode Scramjet 8 < M < 10 for pull-up maneuver to staging point (orbiter release) cruise-back initially scramjet-powered with final portion as glider to terminal landing. NASA Image
NASA Baseline TSTO Mission Profile
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Unmanned, fully reusable and sized to deploy (or retrieve) a 20,000 lb payload to a 100100 nmi., 28.5° inclination orbit.
Ref: Snyder, Robinson, and Ferlemann, (2010)
TBCC Issues
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Issues: Dual integrated inlet operability and performance issues: unstart, inlet flow distortion effects, bleed requirement/control, and operability margins Propulsion mode transition: high-temperature turbine dual-mode scramjet Wide operating range variable geometry controls Integration/Interaction issues: Inlet/engine compatibility/unstart, etc.
SKYLON: SSTO Spaceplane
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Cylindrical payload bay: L = 13 m (42 ft 8 in) D = 4.8 m (15 ft 9 in)
Body: carbon-fiber-reinforced polymer space frame Multiple layers of reflective foil thermal insulation
L = 82 m (269 ft), D = 6.3 m (21 ft)
LH2: 220 tonnes
GTOW = 275 tonnes
Source: REL Ltd.
Skylon Ascent Trajectory
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TO M ~ 0.5
M ~ 5.2
Karman line 100 km
Source: REL Ltd.
SABRE Rocket
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s800,20
gm
FI
f
sp
Source: REL Ltd.
SABRE Rocket: Air Breathing Mode
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0 < M < 5.5 0 < h < 26 km (16 mi)
Air must be compressed to ~140 atm before injection into combustion chamber This raises air temperature so high that it would melt material walls. SABRE avoids this by first cooling air to −150 °C (−238 °F), using a pre-cooler heat exchanger until air is almost a liquid. Then a conventional turbo compressor compresses air to required pressure.
Excess air is passed down a spill duct which has a burner to recover some of drag losses.
Source: REL Ltd.
Hybrid Air-breathing Rocket
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A simple translating axisymmetric shock cone inlet slows air to subsonic speeds using two shock reflections. Some air passes through a precooler into central core, and remainder goes directly through a ring of bypass ramjets. Central core behind precooler uses a turbo-compressor run from same gaseous helium loop which compresses air and feeds it into four high-pressure rocket combustion chambers.
Why a Curved nacelle? To help provide lift proportional to center of mass.
Civil Hypersonic Transport
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European Space Agency LAPCAT II: LAPCAT-A2 Mach 5 airliner powered by a pre-cooled air-turbo ramjet, and Mach 8 airplane powered by a ramjet engine, both fueled by LH2
JAPAN’s Exploration Space Agency: Hytex, Mach 5 hypersonic airliner propelled by a pre-cooled turbojet engine
At Mach 5, air Tt ~ 1320K impractical to compress air due to work requirement and because resulting compressor delivery temperature would be too high.
GTOM: 400 tonnes, Fuel mass: 198 tonnes (LH2)
Issues for Hypersonic Airplanes
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Environment: Lifetime of water vapor decreases exponentially, taking from 30 years at 25 km altitude to less than one year above 32 to 34 km. M8 LAPCAT 2 airliner will fly above 33 km to minimize environmental impact.
Sonic Boom: generates 160-db noise that travels to ground and permanently damage human ears. Hypersonic planes to fly over North Pole and cross Bering Strait, avoiding populated land; it will fly higher so its ground shock waves will be spread out and produce a smaller shock wave
Aerodynamic Heating: Plane travelling at M5+ will withstand surface temperatures ~1,000°C. Advanced materials required.
Fuel Consumption: M8 plane consumes two times more LH2 per second than a M4 plane. M8 plane gets to destination in half time so fuel consumed overall is ~ same
Hypersonic Propulsion Challenges
• Operating efficiently and reliably over an extraordinarily large range of flight conditions, including, 0 < M < 6, 0 < M < 10, and from sea level to orbital altitude.
• Accomplishing stable, efficient mixing and combustion of fuel and air within burner of reasonable size.
• Provide structural integrity necessary for reusable system despite hostile environmental conditions.
• Integrate multiple cycle engines into a single propulsion system capable of operating in multiple modes, e.g., turbojet-ramjet-scramjet-rocket, or rocket-scramjet-rocket.
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We are improving analytical tools, ground and flight testing facilities, and developing technologies
to finally prove that hypersonic air-breathing propulsion systems are ready for routine operations.
Hypersonic Technologies
Advanced High Temperature Materials - new formulations and processes for metals and composite materials
Fuels and Injection Techniques
Structures – lightweight primary structures, reusable tanks for cryogenics
Optimization of High Performance Scramjets
Computational Fluid Dynamic (CFD) Methods and Algorithms – computer simulation
Heat Control – Cooling techniques and insulation, regenerative fuels, etc.
Ground and Flight Tests under realistic flight conditions
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www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/StructuresMaterials/AdvMet/research/titanium.html
Structures, Materials, and Thermal Management
• A scramjet-powered vehicle will take a more leveled ascent trajectory.
• Due to low T/W scramjet needs more time to accelerate. This depressed trajectory implies that vehicle stays a long time in atmosphere at hypersonic speeds, so atmospheric friction is a huge problem.
• Heat addition produced by combustion at high velocities and temperatures is another significant factor.
• Materials for structure must have excellent properties and be adequate to deal with these and other hypersonic flow phenomena.
• Cooling of the engine’s structure by fuel or radiation is essential.
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Glass, et al, 2002
At M < 7, X-43A’s horizontal tail leading edges 2600°F (1400 °C) and nose 2000°F (1090 C°) At Mach 10, Tw ~ 3600°F (1900°C)
U.S. Hypersonic Ground Test Facilities
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Hypersonic Scaling Laws
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What scaled propulsion components and initial conditions must be tested to provide adequate scaling parameters with respect to various performance parameters of interest in order to obtain a desired level of performance at a particular scale of the hypersonic engine?
Numerical Methods for Hypersonic Flows
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With limited ability to adequately represent hypersonic flow experimentally, hypersonic CFD predictions becomes even more difficult because we lack substantial experimental data for a variety of flow geometries and flight conditions.
Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) of HIFiRE scramjet
Hypersonic flow dynamics is complicated by interaction of boundary layer and shear layer with shock waves, leading to flow separation and instability not amenable to simple analysis. CFD aims to perform direct numerical simulation (DNS) for all aerodynamic flows of interest. High-speed reacting turbulent flows are challenging to simulate fully. Large eddy simulation (LES) allows for modeling of small scales of turbulence while resolving large-scale turbulent structures; currently limited to low Reynolds number flows.
HAP Technologies and R&D Topics
• Dual-Mode Combustors
• Materials and Structures light-weight, high-T, high-strength O2 compatible, CC
• CFD Modeling, Simulation, and Prediction
• Ground Testing diagnostics, scale, time
• Flight Testing infrastructure, telemetry
• Thermal Management TPS
• High-Energy Density Propellants
• TBCC Mach 4+ Turbine Acceleration
• Fuel Injection and Flameholding
• Design Optimization Methodology
• Hypersonic Aerothermodynamics
• Propulsion Flowpath Development
• Actuation Mechanism, Hot Valves, Seals
• TBCC Turbine/Scramjet Mode Transition
• TBCC Inlet Optimization
• RBCC Mode Transition Control
• Scaling Laws
• Combined and/or Hybrid Propulsion Cycles Dual-Mode Scramjet, Turbine/Scramjet/Rocket
• Design Optimization
• Boundary Layer Transition
• Combined Cycle Propulsion Mode Transition
• Airframe-Propulsion Integration Aerothermodynamic Performance
• Inlet Unstart Prediction/Control
• Combustor Flameout
• Shock Interaction Control
• Ignition/Flameout/Flameholding Testing, Modeling and Simulation
• Combustion Stability
• Combustor/Isolator Interaction
• RBCC and TBCC Mode Transition
• RBCC Inlet/Nozzle Integration
• TBCC and RBCC Flow Path Optimization
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The Race for Hypersonic Travel Has Begun …