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Turbine design and application volumes 1, 2, and 3NASA has an interest in turbines related primarily to aeronautics and space applications. Airbreathing turbine engines provide jet and turboshaft propulsion, as well as auxiliary power for aircraft. Propellant-driven turbines provide rocket propulsion and auxiliary power for spacecraft. Closed-cycle turbine engines using inert gases, organic fluids, and metal fluids have been studied for providing long-duration electric power for spacecraft. Other applications of interest for turbine engines include land-vehicle (cars, trucks, buses, trains, etc.) propulsion power and ground-based electrical power. In view of the turbine-system interest and efforts at Lewis Research Center, a course entitled 'Turbine Design and Application' was presented during 1968-69 as part of the In-house Graduate Study Program. The course was somewhat revised and again presented in 1972-73. Various aspects of turbine technology were covered including thermodynamic and fluid-dynamic concepts, fundamental turbine concepts, velocity diagrams, losses, blade aerodynamic design, blade cooling, mechanical design, operation, and performance. The notes written and used for the course have been revised and edited for publication. Such a publication can serve as a foundation for an introductory turbine course, a means for self-study, or a reference for selected topics. Any consistent set of units will satisfy the equations presented. Two commonly used consistent sets of units and constant values are given after the symbol definitions. These are the SI units and the U.S. customary units. A single set of equations covers both sets of units by including all constants required for the U.S. customary units and defining as unity those not required for the SI units. Three volumes are compiled into one.
Document ID
19950015924
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Special Publication (SP)
Authors
Arthur J Glassman
(Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1994
Subject Category
Aircraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
LC-94-67487
E-5666-Vol-1-3
NASA-SP-290-Vol-1-3
NAS 1.21:290-Vol-1-3
Report Number: LC-94-67487
Report Number: E-5666-Vol-1-3
Report Number: NASA-SP-290-Vol-1-3
Report Number: NAS 1.21:290-Vol-1-3
Accession Number
95N22341
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
Engine design
Turbine engines
Aircraft engines
Automobile engines
Cooling
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