Criteria is presented to assess the relative merits of different propulsion systems. Previous references focus mainly on subsonic or low supersonic flight speeds. The main focus here is on a higher range, from low supersonic to orbital velocities. Air breathing propulsion systems for hypersonic flight persent the engine designer with circumstances that differ in important fundamental ways from those encountered in engines designed for operation at subsonic or low supersonic speeds. This analysis highlights the importance of various features of hypersonic engine design. Since the performance of hypersonic engines are energy limited, unlike low speed engines which are stagnation pressure limited, the efficient use of the energy of the fuel used is critical to minimize the take-off fuel mass fraction of the vehicle. Furthermore, since the required energy increase of a vehicle per incremental speed change increases with speed, the engine must be designed to operate efficiently at high speed. An analysis of engine performance in terms of entropy changes of the flow passing through the engine allows comparison of various engine designs as well as a convenient method to determine the effect of individual engine component efficiencies on overall engine performance.


    Access

    Access via TIB

    Check availability in my library


    Export, share and cite



    Title :

    Propulsion over a wide Mach number range


    Contributors:

    Publication date :

    1989-03-01


    Type of media :

    Theses


    Type of material :

    No indication


    Language :

    English




    Propulsion over a Wide Mach Number Range

    E. L. Resler / B. M. Greenberg | NTIS | 1989


    AERODYNAMIC DESIGN OPTIMIZATION OF HYPERSONIC WING OVER WIDE MACH-NUMBER RANGE CONSIDERING LIFT MATCHING

    Zhang, Y. / Han, Z.-H. / Liu, F. et al. | British Library Conference Proceedings | 2021


    Review of propulsion for high mach number aircraft

    Lane, R.J. | Engineering Index Backfile | 1966


    A Review of Propulsion for High Mach Number Aircraft

    Lane, R.J. | Emerald Group Publishing | 1966


    Future High Mach Propulsion

    Messersmith, N. / Castro, J. / AIAA et al. | British Library Conference Proceedings | 2003