scholarly journals A Starting Characteristics Study of the Scramjet Engine Test Facility with a Mach 5.0 Nozzle

2013 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 63-72
Author(s):  
Yang-Ji Lee ◽  
In-Young Yang ◽  
Soo-Seok Yang
Author(s):  
Yang Ji Lee ◽  
Sang Hun Kang ◽  
Soo Seok Yang

Korea Aerospace Research Institute started on design and development of a hypersonic air-breathing engine test facility from 2000 and completed the test facility installation in July 2009. This facility, designated as the Scramjet engine test facility (SETF), is a blow-down type high enthalpy wind tunnel which has a pressurized air supply system, air heater system, free-jet type test chamber, fuel supply system, facility control/measurement system, and exhaust system with an air ejection. Unlike most aerodynamic wind-tunnel, SETF should simulate the enthalpy condition at a flight condition. To attain a flight condition, a highly stagnated air comes into the test cell through a supersonic nozzle. Also, an air ejector of the SETF is used for simulating altitude conditions of the engine, and facility starting. SETF has a storage air heater (SAH) type heating system. This SAH can supply a hot air with a maximum temperature of 1300K. Using the SAH, SETF can achieve the Mach 5.0 flight at an altitude of 20 km condition. SETF has a free-jet type test cell and this free-jet type test cell can simulate a boundary layer effect between an airplane and engine using the facility nozzle, but it is too difficult to predict the nature of the facility. Therefore it is required to understand the starting characteristics of the facility by experiments. In 2009, a Mach 3.5 test of SETF was done for acceptance testing which is a maximum air supply condition of 20 kg/s. SETF showed the facility efficiency of a 100% without a test model at the Mach 3.5 condition. In 2010, a Mach 6.7 aerodynamic test campaign with a scramjet engine intake. But SETF could not start at the Mach 6.7 condition with the existing ejector system at that time. To get a facility starting, we modified the ejector system. After modification of the ejector system, SETF started at the Mach 6.7 condition with a facility efficiency of 58%. In this paper, the starting characteristics of the SETF with various flight conditions, and modifications of the ejector system will be described.


1992 ◽  
Author(s):  
HIROSHI MIYAJIMA ◽  
NOBUO CHINZEI ◽  
TOHRU MITANI ◽  
YOSHIO WAKAMATSU ◽  
MASATAKA MAITA

Author(s):  
Sadatake Tomioka ◽  
Shuuichi Ueda ◽  
Kohichiro Tani ◽  
Takeshi Kanda

Author(s):  
Martin Marx ◽  
Michael Kotulla ◽  
André Kando ◽  
Stephan Staudacher

To ensure the quality standards in engine testing, a growing research effort is put into the modeling of full engine test cell systems. A detailed understanding of the performance of the combined system, engine and test cell, is necessary e.g. to assess test cell modifications or to identify the influence of test cell installation effects on engine performance. This study aims to give solutions on how such a combined engine and test cell system can be effectively modeled and validated in the light of maximized test cell observability with minimum instrumentation and computational requirements. An aero-thermodynamic performance model and a CFD model are created for the Fan-Engine Pass-Off Test Facility at MTU Maintenance Berlin-Brandenburg GmbH, representing a W-shape configuration, indoor Fan-Engine test cell. Both models are adjusted and validated against each other and against test cell instrumentation. A fast-computing performance model is delivering global parameters, whereas a highly-detailed aerodynamic simulation is established for modeling component characteristics. A multi-disciplinary synthesis of both approaches can be used to optimize each of the specific models by calibration, optimized boundary conditions etc. This will result in optimized models, which, in combination, can be used to assess the respective design and operational requirements.


1998 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 105-109
Author(s):  
Z. Ren ◽  
T. Campbell ◽  
J. B. Yang

Author(s):  
Raza Samar ◽  
Ian Postlethwaite

In this paper, a 2 degrees-of-freedom multimode controller design for the Rolls Royce Spey turbofan engine is presented. The controller is designed via discrete time H∞-optimization; it provides robust stability against coprime factor uncertainty, and a degree of robust performance in the sense of making the closed-loop system match a prespecified reference model. Multimode control logic is developed to preserve structural integrity of the engine by limiting engine variables to specified safe values. A simple strategy for antiwindup and bumpless transfer between controllers, based on the Hanus anti-windup scheme (1987, “Conditioning Technique, A General Anti-Windup and Bumpless Transfer Method,” Automatica, 23(6), pp. 729–739) and the observer-based structure of the controller, is presented. The structure of the overall switched controller is described. Actual engine test results using the Spey engine test facility at Pyestock are presented. The controller is shown to perform a variety of tasks, its multimode operation is illustrated and improvements offered on existing engine control systems are discussed.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Engers ◽  
John Erdos ◽  
William Swartwout ◽  
Nicholas Tilakos

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