1,445 research outputs found

    Investigation of Power Requirements for Ice Prevention and Cyclical De-Icing of Inlet Guide Vanes with Internal Electric Heaters

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    An investigation was conducted to determine the electric power requirements necessary for ice protection of inlet guide vanes by continuous heating and by cyclical de-icing. Data are presented to show the effect of ambient-air temperature, liquid-water content, air velocity, heat-on period, and cycle times on the power requirements for these two methods of ice protection. The results showed that for a hypothetical engine using 28 inlet guide vanes under similar icing conditions, cyclical de-icing can provide a total power saving as high as 79 percent over that required for continuous heating. Heat-on periods in the order of 10 seconds with a cycle ratio of about 1:7 resulted in the best over-all performance with respect to total power requirements and aerodynamic losses during the heat-off period. Power requirements reported herein may be reduced by as much as 25 percent by achieving a more uniform surface-temperature distribution. A parameter in terms of engine mass flow, vane size, vane surface temperature, and the icing conditions ahead of the inlet guide vanes.was developed by which an extension of the experimental data to icing conditions and inlet guide vanes, other than those investigated was possible

    Application of Finite Elastic Theory to the Deformation of Rubbery Materials

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    The purpose of this discussion, then, is to show how the nature of the strain energy function can be deduced from experiments on rubbery materials

    Investigation of Aerodynamic and Icing Characteristics of Water-Inertia-Separation Inlets for Turbojet Engines

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    The results of an investigation of several internal water-inertia-separation inlets consisting of a main duct and an alternate duct designed to prevent automatically the entrance of large quantities of water into a turbojet engine in icing conditions are presented. Total-pressure losses and icing characteristics for a direct-ram inlet and the inertia-separation inlets are compared at similar aerodynamic and simulated icing conditions. Complete ice protection for inlet guide vanes could not be achieved with the inertia-separation inlets investigated. Approximately 8 percent of the volume of water entering the nacelles remained. In the air passing into the compressor inlet. Heavy alternate-duct-elbow ice formations caused by secondary inertia separation resulted in rapid total-pressure losses and decreases in mass flow. The duration in an icing condition for an inertia-separation- inlet, without local surface heating, was increased approximately four times above that for a direct-ram inlet with a compressor-inlet screen. For normal nonicing operation, the inertia-separation- inlet total-pressure losses were comparable to a direct-ram installation. The pressure losses and the circumferential uniformity of the mass flow in all the inlets were relatively independent of angle of attack. Use of an inertia-separation inlet would in most cases require a larger diameter nacelle than a direct-ram inlet in order to obtain an alternate duct sufficiently large to pass the required engine air flow at duct Mach numbers below 1.0 at the minimum area

    Commentary on Gilbert

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    Commentary on Gratton

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    Commentary on Woods

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    Children and the Law: Keeping an Eye on the Child

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    Foreword

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    On the Microstructure of Composite Propellants

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    The term composite propellant as commonly used in the solid rocket industry refers to a heterogeneous mixture of several phases of solid particles entrained in a rubberlike binder. The two principal solid phases are aluminum fuel and ammonium perchlorate oxidizer; together with a small amount of additives which control adhesive and ballistic properties, they constitute the filler. Either a branched polyurethane or crosslinked polybutadiene network serves as a typical binder. Performance calculations based on the assumption that the enthalpy of the composite balances the enthalpy of the combustion products at their flame temperature lead to the demand for a composite filled with slightly more than 88 wt. % of solid phases, about 25% of which is aluminum. At this point a little arithmetic is in order
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