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A CFD Study of Turbojet and Single-Throat Ramjet Ejector InteractionSupersonic ejector-diffuse systems have application in driving an advanced airbreathing propulsion system, consisting of turbojet engines acting as the primary and a single throat ramjet acting as the secondary. The turbojet engines are integrated into the single throat ramjet to minimize variable geometry and eliminate redundant propulsion components. The result is a simple, lightweight system that is operable from takeoff to high Mach numbers. At this high Mach number (approximately Mach 3.0), the turbojets are turned off and the high speed ramjet/scramjet take over and drive the vehicle to Mach 6.0. The turbojet-ejector-ramjet system consists of nonafterburning turbojet engines with ducting canted at 20 degrees to supply supersonic flow (downstream of CD nozzle) to the horizontal ramjet duct at a supply total pressure and temperature. Two conditions were modelled by a 2-D full Navier Stokes code at Mach 2.0. The code modelled the Fabri choke as well as the non-Fabri non critical case, using a computational throat to supply the back pressure. The results, which primarily predict the secondary mass flow rate and the mixed conditions at the ejector exit were in reasonable agreement with the 1-D cycle code (TBCC).
Document ID
19960052324
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Chang, Ing
(Prairie View Agricultural and Mechanical Coll. TX United States)
Hunter, Louis
(Lockheed Martin Tactical Aircraft Systems Fort Worth, TX United States)
Date Acquired
August 17, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 1996
Publication Information
Publication: HBCUs Research Conference Agenda and Abstracts
Subject Category
Aircraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
Paper-28
Accession Number
96N35521
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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