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SiC Recession Due to SiO2 Scale Volatility Under Combustor ConditionsOne of today's most important and challenging technological problems is the development of advanced materials and processes required to design and build a fleet of supersonic High Speed Civil Transport (HSCT) airliners, a follow-up to the Concorde SST. The innovative combustor designs required for HSCT engines will need high-temperature materials with long-term environmental stability. Higher combustor liner temperatures than today's engines and the need for lightweight materials will require the use of advanced ceramic-matrix composites (CMC's) in hot-section components. The HSCT is just one example being used to demonstrate the need for such materials. This thesis evaluates silicon carbide (SiC) as a potential base material for HSCT and other similar applications. Key issues are the environmental durability for the materials of interest. One of the leading combustor design schemes leads to an environment which will contain both oxidizing and reducing gas mixtures. The concern is that these environments may affect the stability of the silica (SiO2) scale on which SiC depends for environmental protection. A unique High Pressure Burner Rig (HPBR) was developed to simulate the combustor conditions of future gas turbine engines, and a series of tests were conducted on commercially available SiC material. These tests are intended as a feasibility study for the use of these materials in applications such as the HSCT. Linear weight loss and surface recession of the SiC is observed as a result of SiO2 volatility for both fuel-lean and fuel-rich gas mixtures. These observations are compared and agree well with thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) experiments. A strong Arrhenius-type temperature dependence exists. In addition, the secondary dependencies of pressure and gas velocity are defined. As a result, a model is developed to enable extrapolation to points outside the experimental space of the burner rig, and in particular, to potential gas turbine engine conditions.
Document ID
19970017041
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Thesis/Dissertation
Authors
Robinson, Raymond Craig
(NYMA, Inc. Brook Park, OH United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 1997
Subject Category
Nonmetallic Materials
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.26:202331
NASA-CR-202331
E-10685
Accession Number
97N19405
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS3-27186
PROJECT: RTOP 537-04-22
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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