For a realistic estimate of ramjet subsonic duct
thermal-structural conditions and construction approaches, I looked at a generic engine/inlet
combination, sized at an arbitrary 1.00
square feet of combustor internal flow area.
Conditions inside that subsonic portion of the duct are more driven by
the downstream combustor conditions than the upstream supersonic inlet
characteristics. That outcome is unlike
the supersonic capture features and shockdown diffuser upstream. Analyses here rely on standard (NACA
1135-type) compressible flow methods restricted to temperatures at which ideal
gas assumptions are appropriate (under about 5000 F).
Inlet Duct
Construction
I looked at arbitrary-but-realistic ramjet flight conditions
of Mach 3.5 at 40 kft (on a US 1962 standard day) for “design”, Mach 2.5 at sea level for a “low altitude
minimum speed takeover”, and Mach 5.5 at
80 kft for a “high-altitude / high-speed” point. The best construction approach seemed to be a
thin sheet metal pressure shell for the duct,
located on the outside of some thickness of magnesia insulation, and a thin sheet metal liner shell that is
perforated so as not to resist pressurization,
but does provide a smooth internal flow surface that is also impermeable
to the injected fuel. The fuel injection
location is guessed as one duct ID upstream of the combustor entry, so that there is time to achieve some vaporization.
The value for inlet duct ID d2
is based on a dump area ratio A2/A4 of 0.50.
The pressure capability this inlet duct structure must
resist is a max ramjet chamber pressure in the vicinity of 200 psig. This would be experienced only in a transient
max-speed terminal dive to sea level. The
combustor is not at issue here, and its
size is provided only for a practicality reference. I used the typical strength and thermal
conductivity values of stainless steel for estimating thickness and thermal
behavior. That would be k ~ 10
BTU/hr-ft-R and tensile stress allowables of ~1-2 ksi “hot” and ~40 ksi “cold”. I presumed the heat sink temperature
maintained at the outer pressure shell was 100 F.
This basic construction concept is depicted in Figure
1. All figures are located at the end of this
article.
The insulation was presumed to be a fibrous magnesia, similar to mineral wool, but capable of withstanding higher
temperatures. Its “typical” thermal
conductivity is about k ~ 0.0405 BTU/hr-ft-R.
That is actually a little higher than the conductivity of mineral
wool, but ordinary mineral wool is not
rated to serve at temperatures at (or slightly exceeding) 2000 F.
The outer pressure tube runs cool enough to be made of
aluminum, but there must be some sort of
centering-connections between it and the inner tube, which is very, very hot.
Those standoffs or centering connections (not detailed here) must then survive
hot, so stainless steel is the better
option. In order to weld these to the
outer tube, it had to be stainless as
well. A simple SS 304L sheet metal tube
will do nicely for the outer pressure tube,
with SS 316L standoff/centering devices that more-or-less resemble leaf
springs. This outer tube got sized at 18
gauge thickness (t = 0.0500 inch) to meet or exceed the pressure capability in
“cool” conditions, at the largest
finished OD in the study.
The inner tube need resist no pressure, and may rest on the centering devices without
solid attachment. The study shows about
2200 F soakout temperature at the most demanding flight condition, which is beyond the recommended no-scaling
service limit of 1900 F for SS 309/310.
Some scaling will occur, which
roughens the inner surface, but that may
or may not actually be objectionable. If
scaling is objectionable , a non-ferrous
superalloy must be used for this inner tube.
One of the alloys commonly used for afterburner parts would serve
well. The thickness I show for this part
is the thinnest stainless sheet available,
30 gauge, or t = 0.0125
inch. The superalloy should be available
in something comparable, if it is
needed.
Inner Surface Film
Coefficient
Of the three flight conditions, the highest film coefficient occurs at the
lowest altitude, while the largest possible
driving temperature occurs at the highest speed, which is at the highest altitude. As it turns out, film coefficient varies weakly with inner
surface temperature, while the heat
transfer varies all the way down to zero if the surface temperature is fully
equal to duct air temperature. The net
effect is that the largest heat transfer potential to be dealt with (average
film coefficient multiplied by max driving temperature difference) occurs at that
highest-speed condition. A brief summary
of those heating potential data is given in Figure 2 below.
The mild film coefficient variation is shown in Figure 3
below (note scale break !!) for the high speed / high altitude condition. Plot shapes at design and low takeover are
similar, but not shown. The heat transferred at design is shown in
Figure 4 below. Plot shapes at design
and low takeover are similar, but these not
shown here.
These were computed from a diameter-based Reynolds number
ReD evaluated at bulk flow conditions (static temperature T2 and
pressure P2, and velocity V2, with density from the ideal gas equation of
state). For the other properties, I used correlations as good for combustion
gases as air, instead of real tabulated
air values. This was as much for
convenience as anything. The Nusselt
number correlation is:
NuD =
0.027 ReD0.8 Pr1/3 (µ/µs)0.14
for which h = NuD k / D, with k also evaluated at bulk flow
conditions. The two viscosities sown in
the equation are µ evaluated at bulk flow conditions T2, and µs evaluated at surface
temperature TS conditions. The
heat flux equation is Q/A = h (T2
– TS). Conditions are rather
subsonic (well under M2 = 0.7),
so compressibility and dissipation are simply not large-enough issues to
warrant modeling.
I used the average film coefficient h without any final-TS
correction in the subsequent cylindrical heat transfer model, because the variation of h with TS
is so mild. This is good enough to find
out “what ballpark” we are playing in.
The cylindrical-geometry heat transfer model has fluid at bulk
temperature T2 transferring heat to the inner surface at TS
through that film coefficient . That
heat conducts through 3 concentric layers:
the inner layer is metallic and thin,
the middle layer is insulative and thicker, and the outer layer is metallic and
thin. That outer layer’s outer surface
is presumed to be held at a constant heat sink temperature Tsink, in this case,
100 F.
This sort of 3 layer construction with insulation sandwiched
between two metal layers is actually quite practical, if the inner layer is vented so as not to
hold duct pressure. That makes
it a structurally-unloaded piece of thin sheet metal, serving only to be a smooth surface for the
air flow, and an impermeable surface for
the injected fuel spray. It being hot
and weak is then irrelevant. The cool
outer layer is the actual pressure shell for the duct, and because it is cool, it is much stronger, leading to a thinner, lighter part.
The real variable to investigate is the insulation thickness: we are trading off higher inner surface
temperature for lower heat transfer to the sink at thicker insulation. That insulation must be fibrous or at least
open-cell, so that pressure can
instantaneously equalize right through it.
Layered Conduction
Model
The heat transfer model is a textbook cylindrical
geometry, as shown in Figure 5
below. It works by summing thermal
resistance terms for the film coefficient and the three layers, and is formulated to determine heat transfer
rate Q per unit length of inlet duct L.
The cylindrical geometry shows up in the logarithmic variation in terms
of layer radii, and the 2 pi
factor. The individual thermal
resistance terms can be used to determine the temperature drops through each
layer, including the thermal boundary
layer represented by the film coefficient:
Q/L,
BTU/hr-ft = 2 pi (T2 – Tsink) / [denominator]
where denominator = 1/R2 h + sum of {ln(ro/ri)/k} for the 3 layers
and R2
= 0.5 d2; with ro = ri + t
for each layer
As shown in the figure,
the inner metal layer has ri = R2, with ro = ri + t for the metal. That metal ro is the ri for the insulation
layer, with its ro equal to its ri +
t. The ro for the insulation is the ri
for the outer metal layer. Its ro is
that ri plus t. The OD for the layered
inlet structure is then just twice the ro for that outer metal layer.
As a nod to the notion of heat-sinking that outer
layer, it is instructive to compute a Q
for a representative duct length, in
this case L2/d2 = 1.00 to allow adequate length to spray
and vaporize fuel. This answer is appropriate to heat-sinking into adjacent
structure, which would have to be in
intimate contact over all of the duct outer surface.
Otherwise, that outer
duct surface would have to be liquid-cooled with some sort of jacket. If one divides the heat flow by the product
of liquid coolant heat capacity c and the allowed temperature rise dT, one obtains the coolant flow rate wc. Multiplying that by a suitable flight time
gets the mass of coolant fluid required,
and by means of a density, the
volume of that coolant.
I used c = 0.5 BTU/lbm-R as typical for a hydrocarbon
fuel, and dT = 20 F as
“reasonable”. Flight time was assumed
1000 sec as “typical”, and liquid
specific gravity is 0.8 for a typical kerosene-like hydrocarbon fuel. These values are not-necessarily-at-all
“right”, but they are realistic enough
to see informative trends in the answers.
Results
Figure 6 below shows the trends of heat rate to be dealt
with (Q), coolant volume required (V),
and insulated duct OD, all vs
insulation layer thickness. If you look
at the OD trend: at about 3 inches
thick, that finished duct size matches
the combustor OD size for a 1.25 inch case-plus-ablative thickness
allowance. That sets the max feasible duct
insulation thickness at 3 inches, in a
very real and practical sense.
Both Q and V decrease very rapidly with thickness from 0.5
inches to 1 inch, then not so fast, from 1 inch on thicker. In a practical sense, then, 1 inch insulation is about the thinnest
insulation we should consider. Thus, one has the apparent design freedom to choose
from about 1 to about 3 inches of insulation thickness, in this 3-layer approach. But, bear in mind that heat rates and coolant
requirements are actually a little larger,
due to the extra conduction paths afforded by the centering standoff
structures that support the inner metal layer.
The thermal-structural design ranges are not so sensitive to
insulation thickness, as shown in Figure
7 below. At any practical insulation
thickness, from half an inch on up, the heat rate is reduced enough by the simple
presence of insulation, to limit the
temperature drop across the thermal boundary layer to trivial values. In effect,
to within just a few degrees, the
inner metal shell soaks out steady state to the inlet bulk air temperature T2
= 2228 F, which at subsonic
velocities is, in turn, very close to the inlet total temperature Tt2
= 2803 R = 2343 F.
Model results vary from TS = 2188 F at half an
inch, to 2222 F at 4 inches. In effect,
the lesson here is that one can use the inlet total temperature Tt2
as a good guide to suitable material selection for that inner shell, and also just how hot the inner layer fibers
of the insulation will get. Tt2
is easy to compute from only flight Mach number and the outside air temperature
at altitude. Such is given in Figure 8
below. The value of temperature for
which these calculation methods fail (not being ideal gas anymore) is also
shown. One can derive speed limits from
that, outside of which predictions made
by these methods will simply not be accurate.
The speed limit for that “not air” aeroheating-analysis
technique limitation is about Mach 8 in the cold stratosphere, and about Mach 7 at sea level, and 160 kft,
where the outside atmospheric air is about as warm as at sea level. Good non-scaling max service temperatures
would be 1200 F for SS 304/304L, 1600 F
for SS 316/316L, and 1900 F for
SS309/310. By way of comparison, both titanium and plain carbon steel are
listed as about 750 F max service. There
are several alloy steels capable of service to about 1400 F, but only one also has very high cold
strength: 17-7PH (that is what makes it
suitable for ramjet cases that must also serve as integral boosters). The nonferrous superalloys used for
afterburner parts will go to ~2000-2500 F,
but also have low cold strength.
As for the inlet duct pressure capability, this varies mildly with insulation thickness
throughout the practical range of thicknesses.
It might be possible to reduce the sheet metal thickness to the next
higher gauge number at lower insulation thickness nearer 1 inch, but this has to be traded against the risk of
cracking at joints during detail design.
The sharp shape changes at joints very effectively act as serious stress
concentrators. Rise factors can range
from 1.5 to ~5. These thicknesses will
be larger at larger combustor sizes, but
the trend shapes will be similar.
Final Comments
First, these
results vary with combustor size. The
data shown here are for a generic combustor of 1 square foot flow cross
section. At larger sizes, the sheet metal thicknesses for the inlet
duct will need to be thicker,
particularly the outer pressure shell layer. But the basic behavior trends will be the
same.
Second, for
the Mach 5.5 at 80 kft flight condition analyzed here, the inlet air temperature is really too hot at
~2200 F for repeated use of SS 309 or SS 310 construction as the inner tube. Such parts would survive, but would experience an ever-increasing
surface oxidation scaling effect that roughens the inner surface. One of the afterburner-part superalloys would
be necessary for repeated operation.
Third, we have
NOT addressed here the rest of the supersonic inlet structures. These include the compression spike or ramp
structures, the cowl lip structures that
are heated on both sides, the supersonic
throat structures, and the supersonic-to-subsonic
shockdown divergence channel that connects to the subsonic duct analyzed
here. All of these will be more
demanding problems to solve than this subsonic duct.
Fourth, we
have NOT considered here the use of smooth-surfaced non-porous ceramics as the
inner tube sleeve for subsonic duct construction. Such could be used to higher flight speeds
than even the nonferrous afterburner-part superalloys. However,
these would be brittle and shock-sensitive, and of substantially-larger wall thicknesses. Being dense,
they are highly thermally-conductive,
thus tending toward isothermal behavior.
Once hot enough, there is no
practical way to hang onto such a hot part!
Fifth, I did a
quick check of radiation cooling capability toward 70 F surrounding structures
for a duct OD sink temperature of 100 F.
The results showed Qrad ~ 0.02 to 0.03 BTU/sec when otherwise Q ~ 1.2 to
0.2 BTU/sec. At factor 6 to 60 too small
a radiative heat flow, there just isn’t
any practical help there, at nice, low outer duct shell temperatures. The outer tube would have to run significantly
hotter (somewhere in the neighborhood of 500-600 F), to reach “steady state” cooling to the
structure that way, at 2 or 3 inches of
insulation. And that adjacent structure
would warm rapidly, reducing its
effectiveness as a radiation heat sink.
It’s a possibility, but probably
not that practical.
Related Articles by
GWJ on http://exrocketman.blogspot.com:
“A Look at Nosetips (or Leading Edges)”, 1-6-19
“Thermal Protection Trends for High-Speed Atmospheric
Flight”, 1-2-19
To navigate on that site,
look for the by-date-and-title navigation tool on the left of the web
page. Click on year, then month,
then title (if more than one article was posted that month). If you click on a figure, you can see all the figures enlarged. You “x-out” to return to the article
itself.
Figure 8 – Inlet Air Total Temperatures vs Speed and Altitude, for Selecting Inner Shell Materials
Thanks for that analysis. BTW, could you put a search box, available as an option on blogspot, so we can search for topics on your entire blog?
ReplyDeleteBob Clark
Already exists in the form of the labels at the bottom of the article. They are the search keywords you want. Click on one of those, and see only those articles that share the same label. GW
ReplyDeletehttp://www.thespacereview.com/article/3652/1
ReplyDeleteIf you look at "Primer on Ramjets" dated December 10, 2016, on this site, I think you will see the results of real 1975-1995-vintage experience that answers most questions. -- GW
ReplyDelete