2,582 research outputs found
Impact of broad-specification fuels on future jet aircraft
The effects that broad specification fuels have on airframe and engine components were discussed along with the improvements in component technology required to use broad specification fuels without sacrificing performance, reliability, maintainability, or safety
Jet aircraft emissions during cruise: Present and future
Forecasts of engine exhaust emissions that may be practicably achievable for future commercial aircraft operating at high altitude cruise conditions are compared to cruise emission for present day aircraft. The forecasts are based on: (1) knowledge of emission characteristics of combustors and augmentors; (2) combustion research in emission reduction technology, and (3) trends in projected engine designs for advanced subsonic or supersonic commercial aircraft. Recent progress that was made in the evolution of emissions reduction technology is discussed
Forecast of jet engine exhaust emissions for future high altitude commercial aircraft
Projected minimum levels of engine exhaust emissions that may be practicably achievable for future commercial aircraft operating at high altitude cruise conditions are presented. The forecasts are based on: (1) current knowledge of emission characteristics of combustors and augmentors; (2) the current status of combustion research in emission reduction technology; (3) predictable trends in combustion systems and operating conditions as required for projected engine designs that are candidates for advanced subsonic or supersonic commercial aircraft. Results are presented for cruise conditions in terms of an emission index, g pollutant/kg fuel. Two sets of engine exhaust emission predictions are presented: the first, based on an independent NASA study and the second, based on the consensus of an ad hoc committee composed of industry, university, and government representatives. The consensus forecasts are in general agreement with the NASA forecasts
Alternative aircraft fuels technology
NASA is studying the characteristics of future aircraft fuels produced from either petroleum or nonpetroleum sources such as oil shale or coal. These future hydrocarbon based fuels may have chemical and physical properties that are different from present aviation turbine fuels. This research is aimed at determining what those characteristics may be, how present aircraft and engine components and materials would be affected by fuel specification changes, and what changes in both aircraft and engine design would be required to utilize these future fuels without sacrificing performance, reliability, or safety. This fuels technology program was organized to include both in-house and contract research on the synthesis and characterization of fuels, component evaluations of combustors, turbines, and fuel systems, and, eventually, full-scale engine demonstrations. A review of the various elements of the program and significant results obtained so far are presented
Electrostatic potential distribution of the sunlit lunar surface
Electrostatic potential distribution on sunlit lunar surfac
Jet engine exhaust emissions of high altitude commercial aircraft projected to 1990
Projected minimum levels of engine exhaust emissions that may be practicably achievable for future commercial aircraft operating at high-altitude cruise conditions are presented. The forecasts are based on:(1) current knowledge of emission characteristics of combustors and augmentors; (2) the status of combustion research in emission reduction technology; and (3) predictable trends in combustion systems and operating conditions as required for projected engine designs that are candidates for advanced subsonic or supersonic commercial aircraft fueled by either JP fuel, liquefied natural gas, or hydrogen. Results are presented for cruise conditions in terms of both an emission index (g constituent/kg fuel) and an emission rate (g constituent/hr)
Analysis of Total-Pressure Loss and Airflow Distribution for Annular Gas Turbine Combustors
Computer analysis of total pressure loss and air flow distribution in annular flow gas turbine combustion chamber
Alternative aircraft fuels
The efficient utilization of fossil fuels by future jet aircraft may necessitate the broadening of current aviation turbine fuel specifications. The most significant changes in specifications would be an increased aromatics content and a higher final boiling point in order to minimize refinery energy consumption and costs. These changes would increase the freezing point and might lower the thermal stability of the fuel, and could cause increased pollutant emissions, increased combustor liner temperatures, and poorer ignition characteristics. The effects that broadened specification fuels may have on present-day jet aircraft and engine components and the technology required to use fuels with broadened specifications are discussed
Prefect Klein tunneling in anisotropic graphene-like photonic lattices
We study the scattering of waves off a potential step in deformed honeycomb
lattices. For small deformations below a critical value, perfect Klein
tunneling is obtained. This means that a potential step in any direction
transmits waves at normal incidence with unit transmission probability,
irrespective of the details of the potential. Beyond the critical deformation,
a gap in the spectrum is formed, and a potential step in the deformation
direction reflects all normal-incidence waves, exhibiting a dramatic transition
form unit transmission to total reflection. These phenomena are generic to
honeycomb lattice systems, and apply to electromagnetic waves in photonic
lattices, quasi-particles in graphene, cold atoms in optical lattices
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