Affiliation:
1. Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai 600 036, India
Abstract
Major challenges in developing and realizing a novel aluminum–water reaction-based water ramjet propulsion system for high-speed underwater vehicles and demonstration of a water-breathing jet propulsion test facility are investigated. Two stages of combustion, propellant grain combustion and subsequent water combustion, with primary combustion products are adopted. High-pressure-molded propellant grains up to 45% of micro–nano ([Formula: see text]) aluminum were prepared and combusted in the primary chamber, which exhibits mild ignition delay, and a residue of 4–6% was retained. Once water is injected into the secondary chamber, the net thrust generation is increased more than twice from the exhaust jet and improves the specific impulse by 40%. The lean fuel conditions in the secondary chamber lead to reduction in combustion propensity, which causes drop in [Formula: see text] efficiency. The ultrafine iron-oxide-catalyzed micro–nano blended propellants marginally improved the propulsive performance than the uncatalyzed compositions. The [Formula: see text] efficiency of the catalyzed propellants was enhanced up to 38.6%. Aluminum agglomeration in primary combustion considerably occurred; apparently, only a fraction of aluminum particles or agglomerates are completely burnt within the secondary chamber, and the remaining aluminum particles are either partially burnt or go unreacted.
Publisher
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Mechanical Engineering,Fuel Technology,Aerospace Engineering
Cited by
4 articles.
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