Title: Combustion Team Supersonic Combustion
1Combustion TeamSupersonic Combustion
Faculty Advisors
Student Researchers
- Sara Esparza
- Cesar Olmedo
- Alonzo Perez
Dr. Guillaume Dr. Wu Dr. Boussalis Dr. Liu Dr.
Rad
2Outline
- Purpose
- Final Design
- Intake Manifold
- Testing
- New Ignition System
- Three way ignition
3Purpose
- To achieve and sustain Mach 1.0 to 2.0 speed,
induce mixing and sustain combustion for a
duration
4Initial Design
5Combustion Chamber Modifications
- Combustion Chamber Shortened
- Reduced Aspect Ratio
6Final Design
7Intake Manifold
8Purpose of Intake Manifold
- Will assist in premixing concept
- Determine if injection of hydrogen will effect
nozzle performance - If no effect is determine we will introduce
- Hydrogen
- Silane
-
9Intake ManifoldProgress
Side View
FrontView
10Intake and Nozzle
Side View
11Dr. Wu Pressure Adaptor
Front View
12Pressure Testing
- Used pressure adaptor to determine if hydrogen
gas will effect nozzle performance. - Comparing past nozzle value with intake manifold
and hydrogen gas set up - Hydrogen gas did not affect nozzle performance
13Pressure Reading at Nozzle Exit
- Pressure gage reading
- Andersons text Mach 2.6
- Area ratio 2.89
14New ignition System
- Three Tesla coils ( one for each spark plug)
- 13 V DC 1 Amp power source that is button
operated - All wire will be insulated and routed away from
any flammable sources
15New Ignition SourceTesla Coil
- Allows for continuous spark
- Tested strong spark across air flow
- Resonant transformer circuit
16Final Design
17Future Work
- Test hydrogen combustion at high pressure
- Acquire silane
- Finish combustion chamber
- Continue testing
18Acknowledgements
- Many Thanks!
- Dr. Darrell Guillaume
- Dr. Chivey Wu
- Dr. Helen Boussalis
- Combustion Team
- UAV Team
- Special thanks to Solomon Yitagesu
19Timeline2009 - 2010
Hypersonic Combustion Team Timeline February 2011 - March 2011 Hypersonic Combustion Team Timeline February 2011 - March 2011 Hypersonic Combustion Team Timeline February 2011 - March 2011 Hypersonic Combustion Team Timeline February 2011 - March 2011 Hypersonic Combustion Team Timeline February 2011 - March 2011 Hypersonic Combustion Team Timeline February 2011 - March 2011
2011 2011 2011 2011 2011 2011
Student Name FEB FEB FEB FEB Mar
Sara Esparza Finish fabrication of combustion chamber Built Telsa Coil Built Telsa Coil Test Intake with Hydrogen Find machine Shop to Polish intake surface
Sara Esparza Fluent analysis of hydrogen and air inside intake mixture Determine the possibility of premixing hydrogen Determine the possibility of premixing hydrogen Test Intake with Hydrogen Find machine Shop to Polish intake surface
Cesar Olmedo Finish fabrication of combustion chamber Purchase Third Telsa Coil Fabrication of new Dr Wu Pressure Adapter Test Intake with Hydrogen Fabricate new intake test holder
Cesar Olmedo Fluent analysis of combustion chamber Purchase Third Telsa Coil Fabrication of new Dr Wu Pressure Adapter Test Intake with Hydrogen Fabricate new intake test holder
20Textbook References
- Anderson, J. Compressible Flow.
- Anderson, J. Hypersonic High Temperature Gas
Dynamics - Curran, E. T. S. N. B. Murthy, Scramjet
Propulsion - AIAA Educational Series,
- Fogler, H.S. Elements of Chemical Reaction
Engineering Prentice Hall International Studies.
3rd ed. 1999. - Heiser, W.H. D. T. Pratt Hypersonic
Airbreathing Propulsion - AIAA Educational Series.
- Olfe, D. B. V. Zakkay Supersonic Flow,
Chemical Processes, Radiative Transfer - Perry, R. H. D. W. Green Perrys Chemical
Engineers Handbook - McGraw-Hill
- Turns, S.R. An Introduction to Combustion
- White, E.B. Fluid Mechanics.
4/8/2015
NASA Grant URC NCC NNX08BA44A
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21Journal References
- Allen, W., P. I. King, M. R. Gruber, C. D.
Carter, K. Y Hsu, Fuel-Air Injection Effects on
Combustion in Cavity-Based Flameholders in a
Supersonic Flow. 41st AIAA Joint Propulsal.
2005-4105. - Billig, F. S. Combustion Processes in Supersonic
Flow. Journal of Propulsion, Vol. 4, No. 3,
May-June 1988 - Da Riva, Ignacio, Amable Linan, Enrique Fraga
Some Results in Supersonic Combustion 4th
Congress, Paris, France, 64-579, Aug 1964 - Esparza, S. Supersonic Combustion CSULA
Symposium, May 2008. - Grishin, A. M. E. E. Zelenskii,
Diffusional-Thermal Instability of the Normal
Combustion of a Three-Component Gas Mixture,
Plenum Publishing Corporation. 1988. - Ilbas, M., The Effect of Thermal Radiation and
Radiation Models on Hydrogen-Hydrocarbon
Combustion Modeling International Journal of
Hydrogen Energy. Vol 30, Pgs. 1113-1126. 2005. - Qin, J, W. Bao, W. Zhou, D. Yu. Performance
Cycle Analysis of an Open Cooling Cycle for a
Scramjet IMechE, Vol. 223, Part G, 2009. - Mathur, T., M. Gruber, K. Jackson, J. Donbar, W.
Donaldson, T. Jackson, F. Billig. Supersonic
Combustion Experiements with a Cavity-Based Fuel
Injection. AFRL-PR-WP-TP-2006-271. Nov 2001 - McGuire, J. R., R. R. Boyce, N. R. Mudford.
Journal of Propulsion Power, Vol. 24, No. 6,
Nov-Dec 2008 - Mirmirani, M., C. Wu, A. Clark, S, Choi, B.
Fidam, Airbreathing Hypersonic Flight Vehicle
Modeling and Control, Review, Challenges, and a
CFD-Based Example - Neely, A. J., I. Stotz, S. OByrne, R. R. Boyce,
N. R. Mudford, Flow Studies on a Hydrogen-Fueled
Cavity Flame-Holder Scramjet. AIAA 2005-3358,
2005. - Tetlow, M. R. C. J. Doolan. Comparison of
Hydrogen and Hydrocarbon-Fueld Scramjet Engines
for Orbital Insertion Journal of Spacecraft and
Rockets, Vol 44., No. 2., Mar-Apr 2007.
4/8/2015
NASA Grant URC NCC NNX08BA44A
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