2007 NASA Guide To Engines

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Pushing the Envelope:
A NASA Guide to Engines
A Guide for Educators and Students With
Chemistry, Physics, and Math Activities

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

This publication is in the public domain. It is not protected by


copyright, and permission is not required for duplication.

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Acknowledgments

Writers and Contributors


Roger Storm, Oklahoma State University
Mark Skor, North Royalton High School
Lisa D. Koch, NASA Glenn Research Center
Tom Benson, NASA Glenn Research Center
Carol Galica, NASA Glenn Research Center/SGT, Inc.

Editor
Laura Becker

Proofreader
Lorraine Feher

Design and Layout


James Lucic

Problems and Solutions


Roger Storm
Mark Skor

This guide was produced by the NASA Glenn Research Center Office
of Educational Programs in Cleveland, OH, and the NASA Aeronautics
Research Mission Directorate.

NASA gratefully acknowledges the generosity of Cislunar Aerospace,


Inc, for permission to use engine diagrams in this book (pp. 12–14).

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PREFACE
The Pushing the Envelope Educators Guide has
been developed by the NASA John H. Glenn Research
Center’s Educational Programs Office in support of
the NASA’s Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate
(ARMD). ARMD is working to transform our Nation’s air
transportation system by developing the knowledge,
tools, and technologies to support future air and space
vehicles. The focus is on cutting-edge, fundamental
research in traditional aeronautical disciplines, as well
as in emerging fields with promising application to
aeronautics. We are investing in research for the long
term in areas that are appropriate to NASA’s unique
capabilities and meeting our charter of addressing
national needs and benefiting the public good. We are
advancing the science of aeronautics as a resource to
our Nation as well as advancing technologies, tools,
and system concepts that can be drawn upon by
civilian and military communities and other govern-
ment agencies.

The Pushing the Envelope Educators Guide


has been created for grades 9 to 12 to aid in teach-
ing math, physics, and chemistry concepts from the
viewpoint of propulsion and aeronautics. The guide is
aligned to the national mathematics and science stan-
dards. The design of the guide allows for sections to
be completed independently and in any order. Prob-
lems using real-world applications are included in each
section to provide practice on the concepts. A teacher
section is included in the back of the guide that pro-
vides worked-out solutions to problems as well as a
listdefining the units of measure used throughout the
guide and a glossary.

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National Standards
Science (Grades 9–12):
Physical Science
Chemical reactions
Motions and forces

Mathematics (Grades 9–12)


Algebra
Generalize patterns using explicitly defined and recursively defined variables
Interpret representations of functions of two variables
Approximate and interpret rates of change from graphical and numerical data
Understand pattern, relations, and functions
Represent and analyze mathematical situations and structure using algebraic symbols
Problem Solving
Solve problems that arise in mathematics and in other contexts
Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies to solve problems
Understand Numbers
Understand and use ratios and proportions to represent quantitative relationships

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Contents

I. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
History of Aviation Propulsion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

II. Types of Engines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11


Internal Combustion (Piston) Engines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Types of Turbine Engines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Turbojet Engines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Turbofan and Turboprop Engines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Afterburning Engines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Ramjet and Scramjet Engines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Ion Engines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Alternative Means of Propulsion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

III. Chemistry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Gas Laws . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Boyle’s Law Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Charles’s Law Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Gay-Lussac’s Law Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Fuel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Hess’s Law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Pollution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
High-Temperature Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41

IV. Physics and Math . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43


Sir Isaac Newton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Newton’s First Law of Motion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Newton’s Second Law of Motion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Newton’s Third Law of Motion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Displacement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Vectors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Ratios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Air Density . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Noise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63

V. The Future . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
Rocket Activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73

V. Teachers Section . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Solutions to Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79

VI. Reference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Units of Measure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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INTRODUCTION

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INTRODUCTION
“What is propulsion? The word is derived from to accelerate quickly and to overcome the high drag
two Latin words: pro meaning before or forwards associated with high speeds. For these airplanes,
and pellere meaning to drive. Propulsion means to engine efficiency is not as important as very high
push forward or drive an object forward. A propul- thrust. Military aircraft typically employ afterburn-
sion system is a machine that produces thrust to ing turbojets to gain extra thrust for short periods of
push an object forward. On airplanes and space- time.”*
craft, thrust is generated through some application
of Newton’s third law of action and reaction. A gas, In this educator’s guide related topics such as
or working fluid, is accelerated by the engine, and pollution, air density, noise, gas laws, and Newton’s
the reaction to this acceleration produces a force on laws as related to aircraft engines will be examined.
the engine.
* From Benson, Tom: Beginner’s Guide to Propulsion
The amount of thrust generated depends on the http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/bgp.html.
mass flow through the engine and the exit veloc- Accessed March 12, 2007.
ity of the gas. Different propulsion systems generate
thrust in slightly different ways. We will discuss sev-
eral propulsion systems including the propeller, the
turbine (or jet) engine, the ramjet and scramjet, and
ion engines.

Why are there different types of engines? If we


think about Newton’s first law of motion, we real-
ize that an airplane propulsion system must serve
two purposes. First, the thrust from the propulsion
system must balance the drag of the airplane when
the airplane is cruising. And second, the thrust from
the propulsion system must exceed the drag of the
airplane for the airplane to accelerate. In fact, the
greater the difference between the thrust and the
drag, called the excess thrust, the faster the airplane
will accelerate.

Some aircraft, like airliners and cargo planes,


spend most of their life in a cruise condition. For
these airplanes, excess thrust is not as important
as high engine efficiency and low fuel usage. Since
thrust depends on both the amount of gas moved
and the velocity, we can generate high thrust by
accelerating a large mass of gas by a small amount,
or by accelerating a small mass of gas by a large
amount. Because of the aerodynamic efficiency of
propellers and fans, it is more fuel efficient to accel-
erate a large mass by a small amount. That is why
we find high-bypass fans and turboprops on cargo
planes and airliners.

Some aircraft, like fighter planes or experimental


high-speed aircraft require very high excess thrust

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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History of Aviation Propulsion

INTRODUCTION
HISTORY OF PROPULSION FOR AVIATION by introducing steam into a cylinder and then cool-
ing it, causing the steam to condense. This created a
Throughout man’s history there has been a con- rapid decrease in the volume of gas present and thus
stant need for power to move. Whether to hunt for caused a piston to move. Watt’s improvement, con-
food, to escape predators or enemies, to plow a field, densing the steam outside the working cylinder, was
to take goods to trade, to go to war; there has always so efficient that he is often wrongly credited with the
been a need to get from one place to another. invention of the steam engine. His work brought on the
Industrial Revolution. Factories and mills no longer had
ANIMAL POWER to be located on a source of water power, and the way
was opened to create self-propelled vehicles.
Initially the only power available was your own
muscles or the muscles of some beast of burden. One This new technology was first applied to a vehicle
could go faster by riding a horse. More power could by Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot, a French military engi-
be had by using teams of horses or oxen or hundreds neer, in 1769. His three-wheeled steam “wagon” was
or even thousands of people, but there were certainly designed to carry cannons, and it ran at almost 3 miles
limitations as to what could be done and how fast it per hour (mph). It was heavy and hard to control, and
could be done. after smashing into a wall it quickly lost support. By
1840, however, steam power was in regular use in
WATER AND WIND

Water travel allowed for more speed and greater


loads, but one had to either row, sail, or go with the
current. Men did learn how to sail against the wind, but
the wind does not always blow. They built canals to go
where they wanted, but speed was a limitation.

STEAM ENGINES

The first steam engine was called an aeolipile


(“wind ball”) and was invented by a Greek, Hero of
Alexandria, in the 1st century AD. Steam entered a ball Cugnot steam engine.
and exited from one of two bent pipes. This caused the
ball to spin, but it was only used as a toy. The first steam
device to do actual work wasn’t invented until 1698: An steam coaches, railroads, and steamboats. Man’s
engine developed by Thomas Savery in England was greatest dream, to fly through the air like the birds, was
used to pump water out of flooded mines. Refinements just starting to appear on scene. Hot air balloons got
to the engine were made by Thomas Newcomen in man into the air, but at the whim of the wind. To use
1712 and James Watt in 1769. These engines worked steam power in a practical way to power an aircraft was
an impossible dream. Steam engines were heavy and
required both fuel and water. However, inventors were
not deterred, and experimental aircraft using steam
engines to turn large fans for propulsion appeared as
early as 1882. French engineer Clement Ader built a
series of light, steam-powered aircraft. One of these,
the E’tole, weighted only 653 pounds (lb), including the
operator. Witnesses said that the craft made a few hops,
the longest being 165 feet (ft). Ader, however, had no
means to control the craft.

Aeolipile.

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History of Aviation Propulsion

In the late 1880s American expatriate and inventor INTERNAL COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES
of the machine gun, Hiram Maxim, became interest-
During the period of time from 1860 to 1900 a
ed in aviation and actually became the first person to
number of creative people developed a variety of
pilot a self-propelled heavier-than-air craft. Spending
reciprocation piston engines that burned fuel within
£20,000 of his own funds, Maxim had a huge biplane
cylinders. The first patent for such an engine was by
craft constructed. It was about 200 ft from front to rear
Samuel Morey of the United States in 1826. In 1858,
with a wingspan of 104 ft. Two 18-ft propellers were
Belgium-born Jean Lenoir patented a double-acting
each turned by a separate steam engine that produced
piston engine that ran on coal gas. He applied it to a
180 horsepower (hp) and were run from a common
three-wheeled vehicle that he drove 50 miles in 1862.
boiler. The craft carried four people and weighed an
The French inventor Alphonse deRochas created a pis-
astounding 8000 lb. On July 31, 1894, the craft moved
ton engine that compressed the gas within the cylinder
down its 1800-ft launch rail and actually lifted off.
before ignition and placed it on a wheeled vehicle in
1862. Siegfried Marcus in Austria did the same in 1864.
When removed from a museum cellar in 1950 Marcus’s
vehicle was still drivable!

In Germany in 1876, Nikolaus Otto patented the


Otto cycle four-stroke engine consisting of intake,
compression, ignition, and exhaust. Most cars still use
the Otto cycle today. Gottlieb Daimler invented the first
“modern” gasoline engine with vertical cylinders and a
carburetor, which he patented in 1887. Karl Benz sold
his first gasoline-powered cars in 1887.

Hiram Maxim holds one of his steam engines. During this same time, Samuel Langley had con-
structed a one-quarter-scale model of his previously
steam-powered airplane but with a gasoline engine. It
A second restraining rail—set at a height of 9 inches (in.)
flew successfully in 1901 and was the first gasoline-
and designed to keep the craft from gaining altitude—
powered aircraft.
broke, and the craft rose almost 5 ft in the air for a dis-
tance of almost 1000 ft before a part of the structure
In 1899, Wilbur and Orville Wright began con-
broke and it crumpled to the ground. Although it lacked
structing kites and gliders and unlocking the secrets
any form of adequate control in the air, Maxim’s plane
of aerial control. In 1902 they developed a 32-ft glider
showed that an engine with sufficient horsepower—even
that could be controlled along all three axes—pitch, roll,
steam engines—could make very heavy aircraft fly.
and yaw. In just 6 weeks during the winter of 1902–03,
along with their mechanic Charlie Taylor, they built a
About this time another aviation pioneer, Samuel
lightweight four-cylinder aluminum block engine. They
P. Langley, entered the race for powered flight. In 1897
used their own wind tunnel data to design the first true
he developed a steam-powered model aircraft that
aircraft propellers, which had an airfoil cross section
weighed 26 lb and had a 5-ft wing span that flew for
and an efficiency of 66 percent, a great improvement
over a half mile (mi). Langley’s efforts to scale up this
over Maxim’s flat blades. On December 17, 1903, they
aircraft to be large enough to carry a pilot, however,
made the first controlled flight of a powered airplane at
proved to be very difficult.
Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.

During this same time, Samuel Langley made a


full-scale version of his successful quarter-scale model
with a 5-cylinder, air-cooled radial engine that pro-
duced a remarkable 52 hp. Unfortunately, in two launch
attempts in October and December of 1903, his air-
craft’s structure failed at launch.

During 1904 and 1905, the Wrights built larger


engines with increased horsepower. They also further
Maxim’s aircraft. improved their propeller design and by October of 1905

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History of Aviation Propulsion

they could remain in the air until they ran out of gas—a
period of over 30 min. For the next 3 years the Wright
brothers stopped flying and concentrated on develop-
ing engines and securing patents.

INTRODUCTION
Sikorsky’s four-engine aircraft.

plane trophy races, led various countries to accelerate


the development of improved aircraft, particularly in the
area of propulsion. Superchargers, which increased the
pressure of the air entering the engine cylinders, first
showed up in 1919 and greatly increased performance
at higher altitudes. These were both mechanical and
turbo powered. Another significant development was
an engine block with built-in water cooling rather than
Wright flyer. exterior tube cooling. This improved the power-to-
weight ratio from 1:2 down to 1:1.5, resulting in lighter,
more powerful engines.
By 1911 the Europeans, some of whom did not
honor the Wrights’ patents, had made a number of
Advances were made in air-cooled radial engines,
advances in aircraft design and developed many new
which had a much better weight-to-horsepower ratio
aircraft. They found tractor propellers (front mount-
than in-line engines. The development of the Nation-
ed) to be more efficient than pusher propellers. They
al Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) cowl
tried 4-, 8-, and 12-cylinder engines as well as 3- and
helped to eliminate the drag caused by the large fron-
5-cylinder rotary engines. Propellers with two, three,
tal area of a radial engine. Propellers were designed
and four blades were also tried as well as propellers
with controlled pitch and constant speed gearing to
with variable pitch, but most engines of the day were
get maximum power under different load conditions:
only powerful enough to drive two-blade propellers.
high-revolutions-per-minute (rpm) fine pitch at takeoff
Planes were able to fly over 1100 mi in distance and
and low-rpm coarse pitch at cruise conditions.
above 13,000 ft in altitude, and they could stay aloft
for over 28 hours (hr).
By the end of the World War II, speeds of 440 mph and
operation ceilings of 42,000 ft had been reached with
In 1913 Igor Sikorsky developed the first four
piston-driven engines, producing up to 2200 hp.
engine aircraft that could carry 13 passengers. It would
eventually create 600 hp and be used as a bomber
in World War I. In January of 1914 he flew it from St.
Petersburg to Kiev and back, a distance of 1600 mi.
The war accelerated aircraft development among the
European powers until by 1918 aircraft had reached
speeds of up to 140 mph and effective altitudes (op-
erating ceilings) of over 20,000 ft. The British Sopwith
Dolphin carried a 300-hp Hispano-Suiza engine, while
deHaviland was using a 400-hp American-made Lib-
erty engine in its DH–4 aircraft. P–51 Mustang.

The years after the war saw a number of young


former military pilots looking to replace the thrill of
combat flying. Some became barnstormers and mem-
bers of aerial “circuses” while others got involved in air
races. The races, especially the Schneider Cup sea-

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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History of Aviation Propulsion

TURBINE ENGINES planes or turbojets) entered combat near the end of


World War II, but they did not have much of an impact
By the middle of World War II, nearly every varia- on the outcome of the war.
tion of piston engines had been investigated. To get
more power required more cylinders; this meant more After the war, development of turbine engines
cooling would be needed, and there was also a limit to greatly accelerated since they had a much better
the speed at which propellers could turn. As the tips power-to-weight ratio than piston engines and could
approached the speed of sound, shock waves develop, run many more hours before maintenance. The first
which cause a loss of performance. Thus propellers turboprop airline service began in 1948, and the first
had to actually be geared down as engine revolutions turbojet airline began in 1952 with the De Havilland
per minute (rpm) increased. Comet. In the 1950s Rolls-Royce introduced the first
turbofan engine, the Conway, a low-bypass turbine
with a ratio of 0.3:1.0, where 0.3 liters (L) of air went
around (bypassed) the engine for every 1.0 L that went
through the core for combustion. Today’s high-bypass
engines will run up to a ratio of 17:1 for bypass air.

ROCKET ENGINES
During World War II, the Germans developed a
rocket-propelled plane called a Komet. It was very fast
but ineffective mainly due to high fuel consumption.
After the war, the Bell Aircraft Company built the
rocket-powered Bell X–1. Launched from a B–29
bomber at 23,000 ft, the “Glamorous Glynnis” piloted
by Chuck Yeager reached a speed of Mach 1.06, or
Frank Whittle demonstrating the first jet engine. 1.06 times faster than the speed of sound. This broke
the sound barrier for the first time.
In 1928 a young Royal Air Force (RAF) cadet
named Frank Whittle designed a gas turbine engine
and took out a patent in 1930. No interest was shown
in his ideas because strong enough metals had not
yet been developed. By 1937 the alloys were available
so Whittle renewed his patent and ground tested his
engine. In 1941 it propelled a Gloster E28/39 fighter
plane at over 400 mph.

During this same time a young German engineer,


Hans von Ohain, independently patented a gas turbine
engine, and on August 27, 1939, it flew in a Heinkel
He178 aircraft. Improvements were made, including
attempts at turboprops. Turbine-powered planes (jet Bell X–1.


In the 1960s the
North American X–15, a rocket plane, became the first
aircraft to go Mach 6 and fly above 100,000 ft.

Turbojet engine. X–15 rocket plane.

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History of Aviation Propulsion

ANIMAL POWER AGAIN EXOTIC ENGINES

After all this speed and power, materials were As man seeks to fly faster, higher, and further into
developed that were so strong and yet so lightweight space, new engines have been developed. Ramjets
that on August 23, 1977 the “Gossamer Condor” an and scramjets fly in the atmosphere in the hypersonic

INTRODUCTION
extremely light pedal-powered plane flew a figure eight range, scooping oxygen from the atmosphere to avoid
in the air. Less than two years later the “Gossamer carrying it like rockets. On November 16, 2004, NASA’s
Albatross” crossed the English Channel powered only X–43A unmanned scramjet achieved an astounding
by the pilot turning pedals. We have seemingly come speed of nearly Mach 10! Ion propulsion engines pro-
full circle in means of propulsion. duce a small amount of thrust by accelerating charged
particles. Over a long period of continuous operation
they efficiently accelerate spacecraft to extremely high
speeds for deep-space travel.

NASA X–43A scramjet.

Gossamer Albatross.

SOLAR POWERED ELECTRIC MOTORS

A NASA program researched high-altitude long-


duration flights based on solar power. In 1977 the first
solar-powered airplane, the “Solar Challenger,” flew
six miles. In 2001 the 247-ft wingspan solar plane
“Helios” built by NASA achieved a height of 98,000 ft.
Only rocket planes have gone higher.

Ion propulsion engine.

Solar Challenger.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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TYPES OF ENGINES

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Piston Engines

For the 40 years following the first flight of the COMPRESSION


Wright brothers, airplanes used internal combustion
engines to turn propellers, which generate thrust. The second stroke is COM-
Today, most general aviation or private airplanes are PRESSION. When the piston
still powered by propellers and internal combustion reaches “bottom dead center” the
engines, much like your automobile engine. intake valve closes, sealing the
cylinder, and the piston moves
As the name implies, the combustion process back up the cylinder. As the vol-

TYPES OF ENGINES
of an internal combustion engine takes place in an ume is decreased, the piston does
enclosed cylinder where chemical energy is converted work on the gas mixture. The fuel-
to mechanical energy. Inside the cylinder is a mov- air mixture is compressed to about
ing piston which compresses a mixture of fuel and air one-ninth of its volume, raising its
before combustion and is then forced back down the temperature and increasing its
Compression
cylinder following combustion. On the power stroke pressure. Now the gas particles
the piston turns a crankshaft, which converts the lin- are very close together so they
ear (up and down) motion of the piston into circular will be able to react quickly when
motion. The turning crankshaft is then used to turn the ignited.
aircraft propeller. The motion of the piston is repeated
in a thermodynamic cycle called the Otto Cycle, which POWER
was developed Dr. N. A. Otto of Germany in 1876 and
is still used today. For a complete discussion of piston As the piston nears top dead
engine operation look at the following Web site: center, a surge of high-voltage cur-
rent is sent to the spark plug. This
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/otto. produces a high-energy spark,
html which ignites the compressed
air-fuel mixture. The fuel rapidly
INTAKE combines with the oxygen (burns)
and produces carbon dioxide gas
The first stroke of this four- and water vapor. These hot gases
stroke process is called INTAKE. expand and exert tremendous Power
As the piston moves down from force on the piston, driving down
the top of the cylinder, called the cylinder and turning the crank-
“top dead center,” the intake shaft. This is called the POWER
valve opens and a mixture of stroke, and work is done by the
air and a very fine mist of fuel, gases.
usually gasoline, is drawn into
the cylinder at constant pres- EXHAUST
sure. The ideal mixture is about
14.7 parts air to one part fuel. Once bottom dead cen-
This means that 1 lb of gasoline ter is reached and the piston
uses 115 lb of air! In your car starts back up the cylinder, the
Intake
engine this fine mist of fuel is EXHAUST stroke begins. The
sprayed directly into the intake exhaust valve opens, residual
by a fuel injector. The fine mist of liquid fuel provides heat is exchanged (released),
a great deal of surface area that can react quickly with and pressure returns to atmo-
the oxygen in the air. spheric conditions. The piston
pushes the waste gases out of
the cylinder, and the process is
Exhaust
ready to begin again.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Piston Engines

The amount of power derived from this type of and creates more heat that must be dissipated. Some
engine depends on a number of factors. There is no aircraft engines are air-cooled to save weight, and
work done by either the intake or exhaust cycle, so radial arrangements of cylinders as shown below allow
half of the strokes of the engine do nothing to add to or for more cooling but increase drag. Others are water
subtract from the engine’s performance. The remaining cooled, requiring the additional weight of a radiator
strokes determine the work available from the engine. and water. Raising the pressure in the cylinders creates
more heat, stresses metal, and requires special fuel to
volume prevent knocking. Engineers are always trying to maxi-
Constant volume process
mize the balance between the positive and negative
Adiabatic process forces in any processes.

Ideal Otto cycle.

In an ideal Otto cycle, as shown on this diagram,


the area enclosed between the compression stroke (2–
3) and the power stroke (4–5) is the work done by the
engine. To increase the amount of work done this area
Radial engine.
needs to be made larger. Increasing the volume of the
cylinder, having more cylinders, raising the pressure,
decreasing the volume during compression, or forcing
more air into the cylinder (supercharging) are all ways
this can be accomplished. With aircraft engines these Also note that the Otto cycle to the left is labeled
changes cause some problems. Increasing the num- “ideal.” In actual operation, gasoline engines are in the
ber or size of the cylinders adds weight to the engine range of 30 percent efficient because gases don’t burn
instantly at constant volume, there are losses due to
friction, and much of the heat generated goes to waste
in the radiator and exhaust rather than to power.

14
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Turbine Engines

In turbine engines, air is drawn in and compressed, TURBOPROPS


fuel is added and burned, and the hot gases expand
out the rear of the engine, pushing the aircraft forward. In a turboprop engine the turbine section takes
Some of these exhaust gases turn a turbine, which most of the energy from the exhaust gas stream and
drives the compressor. A number of different types uses it to turn a propeller as well as the compressor.
of gas turbine engines have been developed for use These are often found on slower cargo aircraft and on
depending upon the specific needs of a particular type helicopters.
of aircraft.

TYPES OF ENGINES
BASIC TURBINE ENGINES, OR TURBOJETS

Turbojets were the first type of turbine engines


developed. All the thrust of these engines comes
through the turbine and nozzle, which is called the core
of the engine. These are what people commonly refer
to as jet engines.

Cargo.

AFTERBURNING TURBOJETS

Afterburners are used only on supersonic fighter


aircraft and only for short periods of time. Fuel is inject-
ed into the hot exhaust stream to produce additional
Lear jet.
thrust, allowing for high speed at a cost of high fuel
consumption.

TURBOFANS

These engines have a central engine core that uses


about 10 percent of the intake air while a large turbine-
powered fan pushes about 90 percent of the intake air
around the outside of the core to produce the major-
ity of the thrust. These are used on most commercial
passenger aircraft because they make more thrust for
every pound of fuel burned in the core.
Fighter.

DC–9.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Turbine Engines

TURBOJET At the BURNER stage fuel is injected and ignited,


raising the energy of the gas by raising it’s temperature.
The turbojet engine, developed for aircraft in the A typical engine will add about 2 lb fuel/second (s) for
years prior to World War II, was a departure in think- every 100 lb air/s. The energy of the gas increases dra-
ing from the standard piston engine. Instead of burning matically and is accelerated toward the turbine(s) due
fuel in a confined space that is dependent upon pre- to the high pressure created by the compressor. Since
cise timing of ignition, the turbojet engine is essentially these engines can produce temperatures well over the
an open tube that burns fuel continuously. According melting points of the materials used to make the tur-
to Newton’s Third Law (see “Newton’s Laws” in chap- bine, only 12 to 25 percent of the air from the compres-
ter 4, “Physics and Math”), as hot gases expand out sor is combusted while the rest cools the combusted
from the rear of the engine, the engine is accelerated gases down to temperatures just below that which
would damage the turbine. The larger the difference
between the temperature of gas at the turbine face and
that of the outside air, the more thrust is created and
the more efficient the engine.

The next stage is the TURBINE. Here the heated


gas passes over the turbine blades causing them to
rotate and, in turn, to rotate a shaft that is connect-
ed to the compressor. The turbine removes some
energy from the flow to drive the compressor, but there
remains sufficient energy in the gas to do work as it
exits the nozzle.

The purpose of the NOZZLE is to convert energy


into velocity thus producing thrust. The nozzle allows
the flow of hot gases to exit the rear of the engine
Cutaway view of turbojet engine.
until they reach free-stream pressure, which creates
the thrust of the engine. Most nozzles restrict the flow
in the opposite direction. The engine consists of three somewhat before allowing it to expand. This creates
main parts, the compressor, the burner, and the tur- additional pressure and thus, additional thrust. It also
bine, along with the inlet, shaft, and nozzle, as shown controls the mass flow through the engine, which
above. along with the velocity, determines the amount of
energy the engine produces.
A large mass of air enters the engine through the
INLET and is drawn into a rotating COMPRESSOR. Overall, turbine engines have a much higher power-
There are two types of compressors, centrifugal and to-weight ratio than piston engines. They can operate
axial. The axial type is shown above. The compressor at much higher temperatures and can produce much
raises the pressure of the air entering the engine by more thrust than propeller engines. However, they are
passing it through a series of rotating and stationary less efficient at low speeds and low altitudes.
blades. As the gas is forced into smaller and smaller
volumes, the pressure of the gas is increased. The gas
also heats up as its volume is decreased by the com-
pressor. Today’s compressors can have a compression
ratio of over 40:1, much higher than a piston engine.
Also, in order to maximize the engine’s performance,
turbojets will have two different compressors operat-
ing on different shafts: a low-pressure compressor fol-
lowed by a high-pressure compressor.

16
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Turbine Engines

TURBOFAN turbofan engines, where a smaller amount of air


bypasses the core, so they can conserve fuel while in
A turbofan is a modified version of a turbojet cruising mode.
engine. Both share the same basic core of an
inlet, compressor, burner, turbine, and nozzle, but TURBOPROP
the turbofan has an additional turbine to turn a large,
many-bladed fan located at the front of the engine. This engine is a hybrid of a turbojet and a propel-
This is called a “two-spool” engine. One spool is ler engine. It has at its heart a turbojet core to produce

TYPES OF ENGINES
used to power the compressor and another spool to power, but with two turbines. The first turbine powers
turn the large fan. Some of the air from this large fan the compressor while the second powers the propeller
enters the engine core where fuel is burned to provide through a separate shaft and gear reduction. The gears
some thrust, but up to 90 percent of it goes around or are necessary to keep the propeller from going super-
“bypasses” the core of the engine. As much as 75 per- sonic and losing efficiency.

Cutaway view of turboprop engine.

Cutaway view of turbofan engine.

Unlike a basic turbojet, the second turbine removes


cent of the total thrust of the engine comes from the most of the remaining energy from the flow to power
bypass air. Although there is less energy added to this the propeller and less than 10 percent of actual thrust
bypass air compared with that going through the core, is produced by the core. Turboprops operate well in
by moving a very large amount of air the turbofan gets the low subsonic range, with much more power than
a large boost in thrust for very little additional fuel. It is a piston-driven propeller aircraft. This is why turbojets
thus a very fuel-efficient engine and good for cruising. are used by long-range military cargo planes.

Also, since the fan has many blades and the air Another version of the turboprop is the turbo-
is ducted, turbofans can operate faster and more effi- shaft engine. Instead of driving a propeller, the shaft is
ciently than simple propeller aircraft. The pressure ratio used to power such things as helicopters, tanks, train
of a 50-blade ducted fan may be 1.4 to 1.6 (i.e., the engines, and even race cars.
pressure is increased by a factor of 1.4 to 1.6), where-
as a propeller may have a pressure ratio of only 1.02.
This is why large passenger planes using turbofans are
able to cruise at high subsonic speeds and still use fuel
efficiently. Even jet fighters will often use low-bypass

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Turbine Engines

AFTERBURNING TURBOJET

This engine is a turbojet with the added capabil-


ity of injecting fuel into the hot gases after they have
passed through the turbine. The fuel ignites to produce
additional thrust of over 50 percent.

Cutaway view of afterburning engine.

Since most of the compressor air has not been


used for burning in the combustor, there is sufficient
hot oxygen available to burn this added fuel. Stabilizer
rings hold the flame and keep it from getting blown
out the back of the engine. A variable nozzle is used
to change how the gas leaves the engine, producing
maximum thrust when the afterburners are used.

The afterburner does not burn fuel as efficiently as


the combustors, so its operation dramatically increases
fuel consumption. Thus, it is generally only employed
on fighter aircraft to gain short bursts of speed such
as in short takeoffs and in dog fighting. Otherwise, the
aircraft would quickly run out of fuel.

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Ramjet and Scramjet Engines

RAMJETS The downside is that the ramjet engine can only


work when the vehicle is already moving at a consider-
Rockets are a proven way to accelerate crafts to able speed. A ramjet produces little thrust below about
very high speeds, but rockets must carry their own half the speed of sound and works best when operating
supply of oxidizer as well as fuel. About 82 percent of at low supersonic speeds (ranging from Mach 1 to 3)—
the mass of the external tank of the space shuttle is liq-
uid oxygen (oxidizer). Ramjets are designed to scoop
up their oxygen from the atmosphere and eliminate this

TYPES OF ENGINES
extra weight.

SR–71 Blackbird.

Cutaway view of ramjet engine. where they are more efficient than turbojet aircraft.
Depending on their design, ramjets will operate best
at different ranges (operational envelope) of Mach
Thrust is produced by passing hot, combusted number and altitude. Design factors must also com-
gases through a nozzle where the nozzle accelerates pensate for increased drag, which increases with the
the flow. To maintain flow, combustion must occur at a square of the Mach number.
pressure higher than the nozzle pressure. In a standard
turbojet engine this pressure is created by the action of Ramjet engines were experimented with in the
the compressor. early 1950’s in such programs as the Lockheed X–7
and the French Leduc and were used in some missile
In a ramjet, however, there is no compressor. systems such as the Bomarc. The SR–71 Blackbird
Instead, the forward speed of the vehicle is employed reconnaissance plane used some ramjet principles in
to “ram” air into the combustor. At supersonic speeds what would become known as “bypass engines.” At
air enters the intake where a diffuser nozzle causes the low aircraft speeds, all of the air went through the inlet,
air to slow down to around Mach 0.2 through a series compressor, burner, turbine, afterburner, and nozzle.
of shock waves. This sudden slowing creates the pres- At high speed, the inlet did most of the compressing
sure needed to operate the engine. Fuel is injected and where much of the air was ducted around the later
burned with the aid of a flame holder. Since there is no stages of the compressor, burner, and turbine, and
compressor to power, there is no need for a turbine injected directly into the afterburner with some air still
and the hot gases expand directly out the nozzle. It is passing through the core of the engine. This arrange-
important to note that, other than an external tur- ment achieved a speed slightly over Mach 3.2.
bopump to inject fuel, the ramjet has no moving parts
and is lighter in weight than a turbojet. It also can
operate at higher temperatures than a turbojet
because there is no turbine that might melt: thus it is more
efficient.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Ramjet and Scramjet Engines

SCRAMJETS high speeds. The frictional energy from any colliding


air is transferred to the airframe, and temperatures can
When the speed of a ramjet increases above Mach 5, get high enough to destroy the aircraft. The diagram
the temperature in the combustion chambers would at the left shows how the nose of NASA’s X–43A is
exceed 2000 °C. At this temperature the air is so hot designed to slice through the air and eliminate as much
that not much additional energy can be gained by burn- drag as possible.
ing fuel. There would also be some serious material
damage to the inside of the engine.

Pegasus with X–43A (in circle) mounted under wing of


Three views (top, front and side) of X–43A Hypersonic B–52 launch plane.
Experimental Vehicle.
Also, like in regular ramjets, the scramjet must be
Scramjets are a way to overcome this speed limita- accelerated to an operational velocity around Mach 5.
tion. In a scramjet (supersonic combustion ramjets), the One way to do this is to use a rocket as shown on the
incoming air is not slowed down to subsonic speeds, model at the lower left. On November 16, 2004, NASA
but is burned at supersonic speed. This creates other successfully flew the X–43A at Mach 9.6 by first hav-
problems. The biggest of these is getting the fuel to ing a B–52 carry the first stage of a Pegasus rocket
mix efficiently with the air and burn in milliseconds or with an X–43A attached (see inside the circle, on the
less before it exits the nozzle. It has been shown that photograph above) to an altitude of 40,000 ft. At that
hydrogen gas can be made to mix efficiently and burn point the Pegasus was dropped and ignited. It carried
under these conditions. the X–43A to an altitude of around 110,000 ft where
the rocket released the X–43A to fire its own scramjet
engine.

At present much more research needs to be done


on hypersonic flight, where it is predicted that scram-
jets may some day reach speeds between Mach 10
and 25.

Model of X–43A mounted on nose of Pegasus rocket.

Airframes need to be extremely aerodynamic to


minimize temperature increases resulting from the fric-
tion they experience when slamming into air at such

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Ion Engines

In 1959, Dr. Harold of up to 60,000 mph. Electrons are then injected into
Kaufman of the NASA the positive beam so the engine does not build up a
Lewis (now Glenn) Research charge over time.
Center built the first ion pro-

pulsion engine. This type of Thrust T is equal to the product of the mass flow rate m
engine works by creating of the fluid and its velocity V:
ions (charged particles) and
then ejecting the ions at high  2
T  mV

TYPES OF ENGINES
speeds to push the space-
craft forward. Dr. Harold Kaufman •
For ion engines, V is very large but m is very, very
small. Consequently, the thrust produced is very small,
A cathode produces high-energy electrons, which,
especially when compared to chemical rockets. On
along with a propellant like xenon, are injected into a
the space shuttle, the main engines, which are chemi-
diffusion chamber. When these two collide, additional
cal rockets, produce 5 million watts (W) of power; the
electrons are knocked off the xenon atoms, creating
NASA Solar Electric Propulsion Technology Application
positively charged xenon ions. At the downstream end
Readiness (NSTAR) ion thruster engine on the Deep
of the engine are two charged grids containing thou-
Space 1 probe produces only 10,000 W of power. The
sands of coaxial apertures, the first grid is positively
accelerating force of an ion engine is about equal to
charged and the second is negatively charged.
the weight of 22 pennies. The advantage, however, is
twofold.
The positive xenon ions in the discharge plasma
have a higher voltage than the positive grid and there-
First, unlike chemical rockets, ion engines do not
fore are attracted to it. As they pass through this first
have to carry any oxidizer, only fuel. Eighty-two per-
grid they are highly accelerated by the attraction of the
cent of the weight of the external tank on the space
negative grid since opposite charges attract. The grid
shuttle is liquid oxygen. Thus, ion engine systems are
design sets up a potential gradient that focuses the
relatively lightweight and can carry more payload.
xenon ions through the holes in the negative grid so
they accelerate out the back of the engine at speeds
Second, rather than applying
thrust and accelerating for min-
utes like a chemical rocket, the
ion engine thrusts and acceler-
ates for many months. This gen-
tle push over an extended period
of time can result in speeds of
200,000 mph. In comparison,
chemical rockets can reach
speeds of up to 25,000 mph.
Ion engines are about 10 times
more efficient, but the must
operate over a long period of
time to reach their operating
potential. This means that
they cannot be used to launch
payloads from Earth, but once
in space they can accelerate
payloads.

The electricity to oper-


ate the cathode and charge the
Diagram of ion engine.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Ion Engines

Testing an ion engine.

grids typically comes from solar panels. Among the


inner planets there is sufficient power to run the engine
at full power, but beyond this there is less and less
solar energy available to collect. In these deeper space
missions, the heat from onboard nuclear fuel is used
to generate the electricity needed to create the ions
and charge the grids of the ion engine. Unlike chemi-
cal rockets, which generally are either on or off, ion
engines can operate at a variety of thrust levels. The
NSTAR ion thruster engine can throttle down from
2.5 kW to a minimum of 500 W to conserve fuel on
long missions.

Finally, because they can operate for such long


periods, ion engines can be used in station keeping
for Earth-orbiting satellites. A geosynchronous orbit
keeps a satellite located above the same spot on the
equator all the time. Gravitational forces of the Sun
and Moon cause this orbit to change by about 1° a
year, so some propulsion is needed to counteract this
and keep these satellites in the correct orbit. An ion
engine is perfect for the job.

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Alternative Means of Propulsion

Perhaps the biggest dream in powered flight is to a propeller-driven aircraft. It had a wingspan of 121
be able to obtain energy directly from the surround- ft and used newer solar cells that were 19 percent
ings and not have to carry the additional weight of fuel. efficient as compared with a 14 percent efficiency on
An extreme example of this would be human-powered previous models. These newer solar cells developed
aircraft. The Gossamer Condor was the first success- 12,500 W of power.

The latest model was Helios with 62,000 solar cells


mounted on a 247-ft-long wing producing 35,000 W of

TYPES OF ENGINES
power. This aircraft was designed for long-duration as
well as high-altitude flights, meaning that some method
of obtaining power at night was required. Since batter-
ies would add too much weight to the aircraft, a sys-
tem of fuel cells was used to generate electricity. One
system used solar energy during the day to separate
hydrogen gas and oxygen gas from water and then
stored the gases under pressure. The gases would be
recombined to make water in the fuel cell, which gener-
ated the electricity to keep the electric motors running
at night. The water was stored to be reused when the
Sun came up, and the whole process repeated itself.
Helios set an unofficial altitude record for nonrocket-
powered aircraft of 98,863 ft in 2001. Unfortunately,
in June of 2003, turbulent wind conditions caused the
Gossamer Albatross. craft to begin to undulate out of control, and it crashed
into the Pacific Ocean.

ful aircraft of this type, flying 1.35 mi in 1977. Its suc-


cessor, the Gossamer Albatross, crossed the English
Channel in 1979 with the pilot generating one-third of
a horsepower as he pedaled the aircraft. The current
distance record for human-powered flight was set in
Greece by the Daedalus Project aircraft, which flew
109 kilometers (km).

Another “no fuel” approach is to use solar cells,


which convert the energy of sunlight directly into elec-
tricity. Since 1980, AeroVironment, Inc., in conjunction
with NASA Dryden, has been developing this type of
aircraft. Solar cells were placed on the top of the wings,
and the electricity they generated powered electric
motors that drove propellers on the lightweight craft. Helios in flight.
As part of NASA’s Environmental Research Aircraft
and Sensor Technology (ERAST) program, the Solar
Challenger reached an altitude of 14,300 ft in 1980. In Solar aircraft suffer from the limitation of weight and
1981 with 16,128 solar cells on its wings, it flew 163 weather. They cannot fly in high winds or bad weather
mi, crossing the English Channel in the process. By and the power limitations of solar cells limit the overall
1995 its successor, the Solar Pathfinder, had flown weight of the airframe so that payloads are limited. As
to an altitude of 50,500 ft, and in 1998 the modified the efficiency of solar cells improve, this type of aircraft
Pathfinder-Plus set an altitude record of 80,201 ft for will become more viable.

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CHEMISTRY

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Gas Laws

Nearly all of the sources of propulsion for aviation, gas laws. Be aware that the laws discussed here apply
from steam engines to turbines, depend upon engines to what is termed an “ideal gas,” where all interactions
that do work on gases. Knowledge of gas behavior, between molecules and the volumes of the molecules
therefore, is essential to understanding how these themselves are ignored.
engines function.
BOYLE’S LAW
Of all the three common states of matter, gases
have a unique set of properties. In solids, intermo- In 1662, the Irish scientist Sir Robert Boyle pub-
lecular forces (the forces between molecules) are lished the results of his experiments with a trapped vol-
strong enough to keep molecules vibrating about fixed ume of air in a “J” tube. Boyle added different amounts
positions so that solids have a definite shape and of mercury to vary the pressure on the trapped air and
volume. As the temperature is raised, the molecules can discovered that the volume of gas varies inversely with
gain enough kinetic energy to overcome some of these the pressure (the temperature remaining constant). If
attractive forces and the substance melts. At this point the pressure on a gas is increased by adding more
the liquid molecules have enough attraction to have mercury, the volume of the air decreased. This rela-
a definite volume, but not enough to stay in a fixed tionship has come to be known as “Boyle’s Law” and
position. Liquids take the shape of their container. states that
Raise the temperature high enough and the molecules

CHEMISTRY
move fast enough to overcome nearly all the remaining (Volume)(Pressure) = a
intermolecular forces so that the substance becomes a
gas. Gases both fill their container and take its shape. where “a” is a proportionality constant specific to each
In the case of many small molecules like oxygen, meth- gas. On a molecular level, as the pressure increases
ane, or carbon dioxide, the forces between molecules the molecules are forced closer together and the space
are so small that these substances are already gases between the gas particles decreases. Thus the volume
at room temperature. of the gas decreases.

Because the motion of these widely spaced gas- CHARLES’S LAW


eous molecules is random, they collide with each
other and with the walls of their containers, creating Jacques Charles was a French experimenter who
the force we call pressure. Because gas molecules are developed the first hydrogen-filled balloon. In observ-
so far apart, gases are compressible and readily mix. ing gases around 1787, he developed the theory now
Unlike solids and liquids, a gas can undergo significant known as “Charles’s Law.” What Charles had noticed
changes in pressure and volume. The mathematical was that the volume of a gas is directly proportional
expressions that describe these changes are called the to the temperature. If the temperature goes up, the
volume goes up. This would be
expressed as

Volume
=b
Temperature

where b is a proportionality constant


specific to each gas.
Solid Liquid Gas
Holds shape Shape of container Shape of container It is important to note that the
Free surface temperature used must be abso-
Fixed volume Volume of container
Fixed volume
lute temperature. An absolute tem-
perature scale such as the Kelvin
scale starts with zero at the cold-
Three states of matter. est temperature possible, which is

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


27
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Gas Laws

absolute zero. The Celsius (C) scale has zero at a point


well above absolute zero (–273 ºC), so a change from
10 to 20 ºC would not be a true doubling of tempera-
ture. The Kelvin temperature scale uses the same size
degrees as the Celsius scale, and since it starts with
absolute zero as zero, it has no negative temperatures.
The units are called kelvins (not degrees kelvin), and
the abbreviation is K (not ºK). Add 273 to the Celsius
temperature to convert to kelvins; 0 ºC is equal to
273 K.

GAY-LUSSAC’S LAW

Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac, a French scientist who


studied gases and reactions, proposed a relationship
between the pressure of a gas and its absolute tem-
perature. Gay-Lussac found they are directly propor-
tional, and his law (also known as Amonton’s law or the
Constant Volume law) can be stated as

Pressure
=c
Temperature

where c is a proportionality constant specific to each


gas. Again, absolute temperature must be used.

The relationships discussed in this section can


be further investigated in the “Animated Gas Lab” in
NASA Glenn’s Beginner’s Guide to Propulsion found at
the following Web site:

http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K12/airplane/
Animation/frglab.html

28
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Boyle’s Law

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES

Students will
• Recognize that gas volume and gas pressure are directly proportional
• Evaluate energy available in different compounds
• Recognize the need for oxygen in combustion

NATIONAL SCIENCE CONTENT STANDARD B

Chemical reactions
• Chemical reactions may release or consume energy. Some reactions, such as burning fossil fuels, release
large amounts of energy by giving off heat and emitting light.
• In gases, molecules or atoms move almost independently of each other and are mostly far apart.

INTRODUCTION

Boyle’s law relates the changes in pressure and volume for an ideal gas when the temperature is held con-
stant. In real piston and turbine engines the temperature does not remain constant, and Boyle’s law does not

CHEMISTRY
really apply. A much more complex relationship exists between pressure and volume in real engines. As a first
approximation, however, assume that the temperature is constant in the problems below and apply Boyle’s law.
For another example of how these are related, see the Web site below:

http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/compexp.html

Example Problem:

The Allison V-1710 was a water-cooled piston engine used during World War II. It was a 12-cylinder, 28.0-L
engine with a compression ratio of 6.65:1 (i.e., the volume decreases by a factor of 6.65). If the atmospheric
pressure is 760 millimeters of mercury (mm Hg), what is the maximum pressure in one cylinder due to piston
compression?

Solution:
a. First find the maximum volume of just one cylinder. This would be the volume when the piston is at bottom
dead center.

28.0 L L
= 2.33
12 cylinders cylinder

b. Now use Boyle’s law. Since (Volume)(Pressure) = a where a is a constant,

(Old Volume)(Old Pressure) = (New Volume)(New Pressure)

Since the compression ratio is 6.65:1, the new volume will be 1/6.65 of the original volume:
 2.33 
(V1)(P1) = (V2)(P2) (2.33 L)(760 mm) =  L x x = 5054 mm
 6.65 

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


29
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Boyle’s Law

PROBLEMS

1. Diesel engines run at high compression. A 12-cylinder marine diesel has a total displacement of 139.7 L and a
compression ratio of 25:1. What is the highest pressure reached in one of the cylinders if the atmospheric
pressure is 745 mm Hg?

2. In a model airplane one-cylinder engine the bottom dead center volume of the cylinder is 0.90 in3. If the atmo-
spheric pressure is 775 mm at bottom dead center, and if the pressure at top dead center is 7926 mm, what is
the volume of the gas at top dead center?

3. A turbojet engine has 900 ft3 of air enter the compressor and leave at a volume of 35 ft3 and a pressure of
28.8 atmospheres (atm). What would the atmospheric, or “free stream,” pressure be?

4. While an airliner is waiting at a terminal at the airport, a small auxiliary turbine engine is used to provide power
for airconditioning and so forth. If the outside air pressure is 740. mm and the turbine engine has a compres-
sor ratio of 8.5:1, what volume of air would need to be drawn into the engine to have 1.00 ft3 of air in the
combustor?

30
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Charles’s Law

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES

Students will
• Recognize that gas temperature and gas volume are directly proportional
• Evaluate energy available in different compounds
• Recognize the need for oxygen in combustion

NATIONAL SCIENCE CONTENT STANDARD B

Chemical reactions
• Chemical reactions may release or consume energy. Some reactions, such as burning fossil fuels, release
large amounts of energy by giving off heat and emitting light.
• In gases, molecules or atoms move almost independently of each other and are mostly far apart.

INTRODUCTION

Charles’s Law relates to changes in temperature and volume of an ideal gas when the pressure is held con-
stant. In real piston and turbine engines, the pressure does not remain constant and Charles’s law does not really

CHEMISTRY
apply. A much more complex relationship between temperature and volume exists in real engines. As a first
approximation, however, it is assumed that the pressure is constant in the problems below and apply Charles’s
law. For another example of how these are related, see the Web site below:

http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/compexp.html

Example Problem:

If 10.0 L of gas (air) enters a piston engine at a temperature of 25 ºC and comes out the exhaust pipe at a
temperature of 300 ºC, how many liters of gases would exit, just considering the effects due to the temperature
change?

Solution:
a. First, all gas problems need to be solved using absolute temperature, so adding 273 to 25 ºC gives 298 K
and adding 273 to 300 ºC gives 573 K.

volume
b. Now use Charles’s law. Since =b where b is a constant,
temperature

old volume new volume


=
old temperature new temperature

V1 V2 10.0 L xL
= = x = 19.2 L
T1 T2 298 K 573 K

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Charles’s Law

PROBLEMS

1. On a very hot day, 95 ºF (35 ºC), a 5.0 L Mustang is running at 2500 rpm. That means that in 1 minute
12,500 L of air are taken in. If 25,300 L of gas come out the exhaust, what is the exhaust temperature in ºC?

2. Consider the effect of burning gasoline, C8H18. In the engine, gasoline combines with oxygen to pro-
duce carbon dioxide and water vapor according to the equation

2 C8H18 + 25 O2 → 16 CO2 + 18 H2O

Since both O2 and CO2 are gases, the coefficients can be used as volume ratios. This means that reacting
25 L of oxygen would produce 16 L of carbon dioxide and 18 L of water vapor. If 250. L of oxygen enter the
engine at 25 °C, how many liters of carbon dioxide would exit the exhaust at 400 °C?

3. The diagram to the right represents a J85 jet


engine working at a speed of 615 mph and an
altitude of 22,260 ft. In the table below are the
temperature readings at each of the marked
stations of the engine. Considering only the
changes in absolute temperature, what would the
volume of 900. ft3 of air at station 0 become at
each of the stations on the chart?

Station 0 2 3 4 5 8

Temp 282 K 282 K 567 K 634 K 368 K 368 K

Volume 900 ft3

Temperature variations in turbine engine.

4. Use the temperatures from the previous problem and the engine temperature ratios (ETRs) for the compressor
(Tt3/Tt2), burner (Tt4/Tt3), turbine (Tt5/Tt4), and nozzle (Tt8/Tt5), calculate how much a given volume of gas
would change as it moved through each part of the engine if the temperature change were the only factor.
compressor = ______ burner = ______ turbine = ______ nozzle = ______

(a) In which part of the engine is the overall change the greatest?
(b) Why is this the case?
(c) Now calculate the total ratio for the whole engine (Tt8/Tt2).
(d) Comment on the significance of this ratio being larger than one.

32
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Gay-Lussac’s Law

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES

Students will
• Recognize that gas temperature and gas pressure are directly proportional
• Evaluate energy available in different compounds
• Recognize the need for oxygen in combustion

NATIONAL SCIENCE CONTENT STANDARD B

Chemical reactions
• Chemical reactions may release or consume energy. Some reactions, such as burning fossil fuels, release
large amounts of energy by giving off heat and emitting light.
• In gases molecules or atoms move almost independently of each other and are mostly far apart.

INTRODUCTION

Gay-Lussac’s law describes the relationship between pressure and temperature for an ideal gas when the
volume is held constant. In real piston and turbine engines the volume does not remain constant and this law

CHEMISTRY
does not apply. A much more complex relationship between pressure and volume exists in real engines. As a first
approximation, however, we are going to assume that the volume is constant in the problems below and apply
Gay-Lussac’s law. For another example of how these are related, see the Web site below:

http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/compexp.html

Example Problem:

There are four main tires and two smaller nose tires on the space shuttle. The main tires are 34-ply tires and
are filled with nitrogen at a pressure of 340 pounds per square inch (psi). If the temperature at takeoff is 24 ºC
and the temperature at altitude (in space) is –43 ºC, what is the pressure of the nitrogen gas in the tire when the
shuttle is in orbit?

Solution:
a. First, all gas problems need to be solved using absolute temperature, so adding 273 to 24 ºC gives 297 K
and adding 273 to –43 ºC gives 230 K.
pressure
b. Now use Gay-Lussac’s law =c where c is a constant,
temperature

old pressure new pressure


=
old temperature new temperature

P1 P2 340 psi x psi


= = x = 263 psi
T1 T2 297 K 230 K

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


33
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Gay-Lussac’s Law

PROBLEMS

1. Upon landing, the temperature of the nitrogen gas in the shuttle’s main tire is raised from –45 to 130 ºC,
mostly due to friction from braking and from the runway.
(a) Find the new pressure of the nitrogen gas.
(b) If the shuttle tire has a failure pressure of 5000 psi, how hot would the nitrogen have to be to blow the
tire from internal pressure?

2. When an airliner flies at high altitude, conditions inside the plane change dramatically. Go to this Web site and
find out the outside pressure and temperature of a 737 cruising at 500 mph at an altitude of 40,000 ft.
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/atmosi.html

Would anyone be able to survive under these conditions? NO: People would die of oxygen depravation and
would freeze to death. To correct this, the cabin of the plane is pressurized and heated. Air is bled from the
compressor in the jet engines and fed into the cabin. Since pressure and temperature are directly proportional,
raising the gas pressure in the engine’s compressor also raises the temperature. The bleed of air is at a pres-
sure of 29.3 atm and a temperature of 649 °C (1200 ºF). If introduced directly into the cabin, this would ser-
iously “distress” the passengers, so it must be changed. If the air is cooled to 22.2 ºC (72 ºF), would any
further adjustments in pressure be needed?

3. When an airliner is climbing the engine is running at high power, so air for the cabin is bled from the “low”
stage of the compressor. At this point in the compressor the pressure is 2.2 atm and the temperature is
165.6 ºC (330 ºF). If this air is cooled to 22.2 ºC (72 ºF), what will its pressure become?

4. In a piston engine, the ideal point for the spark to fire to ignite the air-gas mixture is as the piston is approach-
ing TDC, or “top dead center.” Now “freeze” the piston at this point so that volume is going to remain
constant. At the instant just before the spark plug fires, the piston has compressed the air in the cylinder to
a pressure of 742 psi and a temperature of 693 ºC (1280 ºF). If the ignition of the fuel raises the temperature
to 1280 ºC (2336 ºF), and the piston did not move, what would the resulting pressure be? If the air entered the
cylinder at 1 atm, how many atmospheres would the pressure be right after combustion (14.7 psi = 1 atm)?

34
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Fuel

FUEL emissions of harmful lead into the environment led to


this being banned in the 1980s.
Energy in an engine ultimately comes from the
energy stored within the chemical bonds of the mol- The octane rating is
ecules used as fuel. Historically, these have been a way to measure how H3C CH3
hydrocarbons (usually liquids) because they have a smoothly a fuel burns. Pb
high energy content and are easily transported and Simply stated, heptane,
combusted. One gallon of gasoline produces 1.323108 which knocks severely, is H3C CH3
J, the same amount of energy as from eating 110 ham- burned in a one-cylinder
burgers! One aspect of creating efficient engines is to engine and the noise is
Tetraethyl lead
match engine design with fuel design. Fuel design? recorded. This noise level
Yes. The size and shape of the fuel molecules play a is assigned an octane rating of “0.” Trimethylpentane,
role in how an engine operates. Combustion engines which knocks much less, is burned and the sound
work by combining a fuel with oxygen, generally from is assigned a rating of “100.” If your car uses “87”
the atmosphere. In a piston engine, this occurs near octane gasoline, this mixture makes the same amount
the end of the compression stroke when the spark of knocking as a mixture of 87 percent trimethyl pen-
plug fires. It is important for the fuel to burn at the cor- tane and 13 percent heptane. It is possible to have a
rect rate. If it burns too slowly, not all the fuel will burn, mixture of hydrocarbons with octane ratings above

CHEMISTRY
producing hydrocarbon pollution in the exhaust and 100. Aviation gas at the end of World War II was rated
carbon deposits that leave hot spots in the cylinder. at 115 octane.
If it burns too quickly the gas-air mixture can detonate
and cause severe and sudden pressure and tempera- Jet fuel, unlike piston engine fuel, does not need
ture spikes that will damage the engine. The noise from to be timing dependent since combustion in a turbine
this is called “knocking.” engine is continuous. Most commercial jet aircraft
today burn one of two kinds of jet fuel, either JET A–1
Straight alkane molecules like hexane and hep- (JET A), which is a kerosene-based fuel, or JET B–1
tane knock severely while a branched molecule like (JET B), which is a naphtha-based fuel. The major dif-
trimethylpentane is very resistant to knock. The reason ference is that Jet B has a lighter composition, higher
for this is a bit complex, but simply stated, oxygen can volatility, and thus is easier to ignite, which makes it
get to the carbons in the straight chain all at once, and better for cold weather operation but more dangerous
so the molecule reacts very quickly, causing knocking. to handle. It is Jet A that is used for most commercial
The branched hydrocarbon has carbon atoms that are jet operation.
surrounded by other carbons and can’t react with oxy-
gen until after the outside carbons react, thus making Military fuel in this country is designated by a jet
it burn slower and be more resistant to knocking. propellant (JP) number. JP–8 is most similar to Jet A
and again is most commonly used since its flashpoint
is around 38 °C, making it safer to handle. JP–4 is
H3C CH3 more like Jet B and has cold weather applications. The
U.S. Air Force stopped using JP–4 in 1996 because it
H3C H3C n-Heptane is more hazardous. An estimated 60 billion gallons of
JP–8 are used each year worldwide.
H3C CH3
Other specialty fuels are made by blending hydro-
Trimethyl-pentane CH3 carbon distillates to meet specific needs. These include
JP–5, which is used on carrier-based aircraft because
it has a high flashpoint (60 °C) that reduces the risk of
Previously, tetraethyl lead was used in fuel mix- fire onboard ship. Another is JP–7, which was used in
tures that contained a high percentage of straight the SR–71 Blackbird. Since the SR–71 operated at a
hydrocarbons to slow down the rate of burning. The wide range of temperatures, from the extreme cold of

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


35
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very high altitude to the high heat generated by flying
above Mach 3, JP–7 had to be stable under all these
conditions. It had a low volatility that made it very diffi-
cult to ignite. This was done by design to keep the fuel
from auto-igniting at the high temperatures reached
by the airframe at Mach 3+ flight. JP–7 was so stable
that a lit match dropped into a bucket of it would just
go out. A special chemical called triethylborane, which
ignites upon exposure to air, had to be injected into
the engine and the afterburner to cause the JP–7 to
ignite. Fluorocarbons were added for slipperiness, and a
cesium compound was added to help hide the exhaust
from radar detection.

36
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Hess’s Law

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES

Students will
• Recognize that heat of reaction are additive
• Evaluate energy available in different compounds
• Recognize the need for oxygen in combustion

NATIONAL SCIENCE CONTENT STANDARD B

Chemical reactions
• Chemical reactions may release or consume energy. Some reactions, such as burning fossil fuels, release
large amounts of energy by giving off heat and emitting light.

INTRODUCTION

Hess’s Law states that enthalpy changes (ΔH) are additive. This means that the sum of the heats of formation
of the products minus the sum of the heats of formation of the reactants (each multiplied by their respective coef-
(
ficients in a chemical reaction) will equal the ΔH for the overall reaction. DH = ∑ DHof products − ∑ DHof reactants . ) ( )

CHEMISTRY
One must first balance the chemical equation and then find the value of ΔHof for each component.

Example Problem:

When hydrocarbon fuels are burned in an engine, oxygen (O2) is a reactant and carbon dioxide (CO2) and
water (H2O) are products. When grilling in the backyard with propane, the equation is

C3H8 + O2 → CO2 + H2O

Standard heats of formation in kilocalories per mole (kcal/mol) are

C3H8 = –25.0 O2 = 0 CO2 = –94.0 H2O = –68.3

Balance the equation C3H8 + 5 O2 → 3 CO2 + 4 H2O

Solution:
For each product, multiply the heat of reaction by its reaction coefficient and add them together. Do the same
for the reactants. Then take the sum of the heats of formation of the products and subtract the sum of the heats
of formation of the reactants to find the overall heat of reaction:

DH = [3 (–94.0) + 4 (–68.3)] – [(25.0) + 5 (0.0)] = –530.2 kcal

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


37
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Hess’s Law

PROBLEMS

1. Calculate the heat produced for burning the following hydrocarbons. Assume one mole unless otherwise
indicated.
f
(a) Heptane C7H16 DH8 = –44.9 kcal/mol

f
(b) Octane C8H18 DH8 = –49.8 kcal/mol

f
(c) 2,2,3-trimethylpentane C8H18 DH8 = –52.6 kcal/mol

2. How much heat could be gained from the burning of 250. grams (g) of 2,2,3-trimethylpentane?

3. Of the three substances mentioned above, which would be the better fuel and why?

4. EPA regulations require that gasoline in some regions


f of the country be oxygenated by adding
10 percent by weight ethanol, C2H5OH . If the DH8 of ethanol is –56.2 kcal/mol and the gasoline is
assumed to be 2,2,3-trimethylpentane, how much heat is given off by burning 250. g of this mixture?
How does that compare to the answer in problem 2 for pure 2,2,3-trimethylpentane?

38
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Pollution

Nearly every form of propulsion today involves air traffic is going to increase over the next decade.
the application of energy derived from oxidizing Reducing CO2 production will require the development
fuels (combustion). The energy is applied to machin- and use of alternative fuels such as hydrogen rather
ery in some manner to move objects. The downside is than fossil fuels.
that combustion is never 100 percent efficient and so
always produces some unwanted byproducts. The previous equation indicates complete com-
According to the EPA, aircraft account for 2 percent of bustion of C8H18, where 100 percent of the reactants
all nitrogen oxides (NOx) and carbon monoxide pro- go to make products. In the real world, engines are not
duced by vehicles and can be as high as 4 percent in 100 percent efficient in burning fuels. When engines
areas around airports. A recent study showed aircraft are not running near full power, such as when aircraft
at London’s Heathrow airport contributed between 16 descend or taxi, the engine temperatures are lower,
and 32 percent of ground-level NOx. resulting in less efficiency and thus incomplete com-
bustion. In incomplete combustion, not all of the car-
bon atoms of the hydrocarbon molecules are oxidized
to CO2. The result is the production of carbon mon-
oxide, CO, which is partially oxidized carbon, and
soot and smoke, which are particles of completely
unburned carbon. This is seen in a candle flame, where

CHEMISTRY
the unburned carbon particles glow yellow and then
are deposited as soot (carbon) on anything held above
the flame. Both carbon monoxide and particulate mat-
ter are related to breathing difficulties.

A third problem with engine inefficiency is


unburned hydrocarbons. Some of the fuel gets through
the engine unburned. This results in what engineers call
“volatile organic compounds” or VOCs being released
into the atmosphere. These molecules react with sun-
Jet taking off. light and oxides of nitrogen to produce ground-level
ozone, a pollutant gas. The solution is to run engines at
The fuels of choice—whether avgas (aviation higher temperature to react all the carbon. NASA Glenn
gasoline) for small piston planes or kerosene for large is studying new materials that withstand higher tem-
passenger jets—are hydrocarbons, compounds com- perature, which would allow engines to run hotter and
posed of hydrogen and carbon. When they burn they cleaner under these conditions and yet not increase
combine with oxygen to produce water and carbon weight.
dioxide as shown here:
The trade-off to higher temperature engines is the
2 C8H18 + 25 O2 → 16 CO2 + 18 H2O production of pollutant nitrogen oxides NOx. In nor-
mal combustion the two major components of the air,
The production of water is not generally consid- nitrogen and oxygen, do not react with each other.
ered polluting, although there is some evidence that However, in the high pressures and temperatures of
the increase of water vapor in the stratosphere where both piston and turbine engines, they do react to form
passenger jets fly (5 to 6 mi high) has caused an a group of nitrogen oxides such as NO, N2O, NO2, and
increase in cloud cover. The production of carbon N2O4 . These are usually referred to as a group des-
dioxide, however, is much more of a current concern ignated NOx (pronounced “nox”). They are a precur-
as many studies have associated its increase with a sor to ozone formation, a factor in acid rain, and an
rise in global warming. Aircraft currently produce up to irritant in breathing. Cars reduce these emissions by
4 percent of the annual global carbon dioxide emissions means of a catalytic converter that causes the NOx to
from fossil fuels, and it is projected that the amount of split back into N2 and O2. On turbine-powered aircraft

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


39
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Pollution

it is the engine design, particularly how fuel is injected


and burned, that plays a major role in reducing NOx
production. The NASA Glenn Advanced Subsonic
Combustion Rig shown below can simulate combus-
tion conditions and give researchers valuable data on
pollution production. Lasers that visualize fuel-air flow
patterns and computer modeling help determine best
designs for combustors.

Diesel engine that runs on jet fuel.

tional also developed the FJX–2 turbofan engine that is


environmentally friendly and low cost, weighs 85 to
100 lb, and yet produces 700 lb of thrust. Although
neither of these companies produces these engines,
Thielert GmbH of Germany is flying diesels and Pratt &
Whitney is flying a new turbine engine for the Very Light
Jet market. Since both types of engines use (unlead-
ed) jet fuel instead of 100LL, they would reduce lead
pollution.
Advanced Subsonic Combustion Rig (ASCR).

Higher temperatures in turbine engines reduce


pollutants, but require new materials be developed
to withstand the temperature increase. New ceramics
matrix composites have been developed at Glenn that
survived over 9000 hr at 2200 °F.

Finally, one source of pollution in general aviation


is the fuel, called 100LL, used in piston-engine aircraft.
In order to boost the octane rating of this fuel, tetra-
ethyl lead is added at a level of 2 g per U.S. gallon.
Leaded gasoline for automobiles was banned in the
1980s, but continues to be used in aircraft. NASA’s
General Aviation Program has developed several
engines that would help in this area. NASA
Glenn has partnered with several com-
panies to produce a lightweight
diesel (2-stroke) engine with a
low-speed propeller that runs
on jet fuel; it would get 25
percent lower fuel consump-
tion than current engines, run
quieter and vibration free, and
could also be manufactured
for half the cost of piston
engines. Williams Interna-
ASCR cutaway view.

40
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High-Temperature Materials

When you make an engine that runs at very high both the pressure and temperature of the air. The pres-
temperature, such as a jet engine, it is critical to sure of the air can be raised up to 30 times and the
select the right materials from which to make the temperature, depending on the number of stages in
engine parts. In 1903, the Wright brothers built an alu- the compressor, can rise to 1000 °C. Here the materi-
minum block engine because of its light weight com- als must have high strength at high temperatures; must
pared to cast iron. Its melting point of 660 °C was well resist fatigue, cracking, and oxidation; and also must
above the engine’s operating temperature, so for them resist “creep.” Creep is the tendency of a material to
it was a good choice. However, aluminum could not be slowly change shape when stressed at high tempera-
used in the hotter parts of a turbine engine where tem- ture. Since no single metal would have all the desired
peratures reach of 1800 °C or more because it would properties, an alloy (a mixture of metals) is used. Very-
melt. high-temperature alloys are called superalloys and are
generally nickel-, cobalt-, or iron-based alloys. Alumi-
num and/or titanium are added for strength, and chro-
mium, as well as rare earth elements like yttrium, are
added to improve corrosion resistance.

After the air is compressed, it enters the combus-


tion chamber where fuel is added and burned. Here

CHEMISTRY
the temperatures can exceed 1800 °C and again
superalloys are used, but without the titanium or alu-
minum for strength because there are no moving parts.
Instead, refractory metals are often added to a super-
alloy. These are metals of unusually high resistance to
heat, corrosion, and wear such as tungsten, molybde-
num, niobium, tantalum, and rhenium. They are used in
alloys and not as pure metals because they are among
Wright brother’s aluminum block engine.
the densest of all the elements, a negative property
when it comes to aircraft that need to keep weight to a
minimum. Ceramics and ceramic-metal mixes are also
For turbines, engineers must not only choose used here because of their high heat resistance. We
high-temperature materials, but materials able to with- are familiar with pottery, tile, crucibles, and fire bricks
stand high-temperature oxidation and strong enough as types of ceramics. They have very high melting
to maintain their shape while spinning at many revo- points and don’t require the cooling systems like those
lutions per second. The specific requirements for the needed to keep metals from melting so they make for
materials used in the engine are dictated by the condi- lighter, less complicated engine parts. The down side
tions experienced in each part of the engine (see the is that they tend to fracture under stress, so engineers
Turbine Engines section for details). seek to create new ceramics composites that incorpo-
rate other materials to improve properties.
At the front of turbofan engines is a large fan. This
typically does not get very hot (<150 °C) so aluminum, As the hot gases move toward the rear of the
titanium, or stainless steel are all suitable for the fan engine they cause the turbine to spin. This drives the
blades. Most engines use titanium because it has a fan and compressor by means of connected shafts
high strength-to-weight ratio, is corrosion and fatigue to keep the engine operating. The first set of turbine
resistant, and would be able to withstand the impact of blades are in the highest pressure, hottest part of the
a bird strike. gas flow and are generally made of nickel-based-
superalloy or ceramic blades. Unheated outside air is
Next in line is the compressor section. Here the circulated through channels inside of the turbine blades
spinning blades of the compressor push the incoming to keep them from melting in this extreme environment.
air against the nonmoving stator vanes, which raises Further down the engine lower pressure turbine blades

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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High-Temperature Materials

often sit. Since the gases have somewhat cooled


by this point, the blades can be made of iron-based
superalloy or even stainless steel.

It is interesting to note that for strength, the metals


used for turbine blades are often grown as a single crys-
tal. A close look at most metals and alloys show that
they are composed of crystals (also called “grains”),
and the places where the crystals meet are called grain
boundaries. A material is weaker at the grain boundar-
ies than within the grains—especially at high tempera-
tures—so turbine blades fashioned from metal formed
as a single grain (no boundaries) are stronger.

Metal crystals.

Finally, there is a casing surrounding the engine.


Although it need not withstand high temperatures like
the core of the turbine, the materials here need to be
strong enough that if a blade were to break off it would
be contained within the casing and not enter the wing
or cabin of the aircraft and cause further damage. Alu-
minum or some polymer matrix materials are used as
engine casings.

Since the development of more powerful engines


depend on the availability of ever stronger and high-
er-melting materials, engineers continue to seek new
alloys, ceramics, and polymers that will meet these
more rigorous demands.

42
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PHYSICS AND MATH

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Sir Isaac Newton

On Christmas day Newton’s First Law of Motion


in 1642 in Woolsthorpe,
England, a premature “Every object persists in its state of rest or uniform mo-
baby by the name of Isaac tion in a straight line unless it is compelled to change
Newton was born. His that state by forces impressed on it.”
father died before his
birth and his mother,
seeking a second mar- Newton’s Second Law of Motion
riage, left 3-year-old Isaac
with his grandmother. As “Force is equal to the change in momentum (mv) per
Isaac progressed through change in time. For a constant mass, force equals mass
his childhood, he iso-
lated himself from social
times acceleration (∑
F = ma .” )
interaction and spent
Sir Isaac Newton. time “playing” inde- Newton’s Third Law of Motion
pendently by building
water clocks, sundials, “For every action, there is an equal and opposite
and model windmills powered by mice. At age 10, reaction.”
Isaac’s mother returned to him after the death of his
stepfather. She sent him to Kings School where the
schoolmaster, Henry Stokes, taught not only Latin,
theology, Greek, and Hebrew, but also some arithme-
tic—claiming it was for the future farmers. In the fall of
1659, this curious 16-year-old was pulled out of school
by his mother to become a farmer.

PHYSICS AND MATH


While Isaac farmed the lands, he observed differ-
ent phenomenon in nature, such as the whorls in a water
stream. His old school master Stokes and his uncle
William Ayscough sent young Isaac to Trinity College in
Cambridge. After the completion of his Bachelor of Arts
degree in 1665, he returned to the farm at Woolsthorpe
to continue to research the sciences. It was during this
isolation that Newton developed the foundations of
the calculus, optics, motion, celestial mechanics, and
gravity. In 1686, Isaac Newton’s three laws of motion
were first published in his “Principia Mathematica Phi-
losophiae Naturalis.” Newton spent much of the rest of
his life quarreling with other mathematicians and scien-
tists. One example is the dispute with Gottfried Leib-
niz over the development of calculus. These disputes,
along with his work in alchemy (involving mercury), is
said to have caused depression in Newton. During the
latter part of his life, Isaac was appointed Master of the
Royal Mint, and he was the first scientist ever knighted.
Sir Isaac Newton also served as the president of the
Royal Society from 1703 until his death in 1727.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Newton’s First Law of Motion

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES

Students will
• Use rate equation to compute distance and time
• Evaluate acceleration as a change in velocity over time

NATIONAL MATHEMATICS STANDARDS

Algebra
• Generalize patterns using explicitly defined and recursively defined variables
• Interpret representations of functions of two variables
• Approximate and interpret rates of change from graphical and numerical data
Problem Solving
• Solve problems that arise in mathematics and in other contexts
• Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies to solve problems

NATIONAL SCIENCE CONTENT STANDARD B

Motions and forces


• Objects change their motion only when a net force is applied. Laws of motion are used to calculate precisely
the effects of forces on the motion of objects. The magnitude of the change in motion can be calculated
using the relationship F = ma, which is independent of the nature of the force. Whenever one object exerts
force on another, a force equal in magnitude and opposite in direction is exerted on the first object.

PHYSICS AND MATH


INTRODUCTION

“Every object persists in its state of rest or uniform motion in a straight line unless it is compelled to change that
state by forces impressed on it.”

Another way of stating Newton’s first law of motion is that when the sum of the forces ∑F (net force) act-
Fw ing on a body is zero, its acceleration a is zero. Any
sum is denoted by the Greek letter sigma, ∑ F.
Fn ∑
Symbolically, this is written as “if, F = 0 then
Dv
a = 0.” This therefore implies, Dv = 0 where is
Dt Dt
(a) (b) (c) the ratio of the change of velocity v to the change in
time t, which is acceleration. This law has two parts:
(1) An object at rest stays at rest unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. (2) An object in motion stays in
motion unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. This law is normally taken as the definition of inertia. Inertia is
the property of matter that makes an object stay in motion if it is moving or remain motionless if it is not moving.
For example, a coin placed on a note card on a jar can be used to demonstrate the first law. In part (a) of the fig-
ure above, Fn + (–Fw) = 0, where Fw is the force due to the coin’s weight and Fn is the normal force. This means
that the net force acting on the coin is zero. If one flicks the card from left to right in part (b), the coin will fall into
the jar. If the card is flicked fast enough, there is little friction between the coin and the card. Thus, since no force
was applied directly to the coin, the coin does not accelerate horizontally. With the card no longer in place, there
is an unbalanced force Fw acting on the coin in part (c).

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Newton’s First Law of Motion

Airspeed
Another example of Newton’s first law is a car trying to
stop on ice. Once the car is moving in a certain direction Lift
and the brakes are applied, the car will not stop easily
because of the minimal friction force between the tires and
the ice. The car continues to move in its original horizon- Drag Thrust
tal direction because the unbalanced force of friction is
small compared with the forward motion of the car. As a
result, the car stays in motion.
Weight
The first law of motion can also be observed in an
aircraft in flight. The four major forces acting on an aircraft Four forces.
in flight are lift, drag, thrust, and weight. Considering an
aircraft traveling at a constant altitude, the lift and weight can be neglected (they cancel one another out). For this
example, the weight change due to the decrease in fuel is neglected. If an aircraft travels at a constant speed, thrust
equals the drag. As a result, there is no net force on the plane and the plane continues to travel in a horizontal line.
If, however, the engine produces any additional thrust, the plane’s motion will change.

Example Problem:

A Boeing 747 has a mass of 174,000 kg. What is the minimum lift force required to get it off the ground?

Solution:
The lift force must overcome the force due to the weight of the plane. The weight force is calculated as
follows:
W = mg
W = (174,000 kg)(9.8 m/s2)
W = 1,705,200 Newtons (N)
Because the force due to the weight of the plane is 1,705,200 N in the downward direction, the lift force
must be greater than 1,705,200 N in the upward direction to stay in the air.

PROBLEMS

1. When an airplane is moving at a constant speed at a constant altitude, the sum of the forces acting on the
airplane equal ________________.

For questions 2 to 4, use the following information: A jet is flying at a constant height of 10,894 km with a
constant speed of 1210 km/hr. This jet weights 109,000 kg. Assume gravity is 9.80 m/s2.

2. What is the force acting on the plane due to its weight (W = mg)?

3. How much lift force is being applied to the jet?

4. If the jet is providing a thrust of 104,525 N, what is the drag force applied to the jet?

5. If the drag of a plane is greater than the thrust generated by the engine, the plane will __________.

6. Use Newton’s first law of motion to explain why people should wear seatbelts.

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Newton’s Second Law of Motion

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Students will
• Use F = ma equation to compute force, mass, and acceleration

NATIONAL MATHEMATICS STANDARDS


Algebra
• Generalize patterns using explicitly defined and recursively defined variables
• Interpret representations of functions of two variables
• Approximate and interpret rates of change from graphical and numerical data
Problem Solving
• Solve problems that arise in mathematics and in other contexts
• Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies to solve problems

NATIONAL SCIENCE CONTENT STANDARD B


Motions and forces
• Objects change their motion only when a net force is applied. Laws of motion are used to calculate precisely
the effects of forces on the motion of objects. The magnitude of the change in motion can be calculated
using the relationship F = ma, which is independent of the nature of the force. Whenever one object exerts
force on another, a force equal in magnitude and opposite in direction is exerted on the first object.
INTRODUCTION
“Force is equal to the change in momentum (mv) per change in time. For a constant mass, force equals mass

PHYSICS AND MATH


times acceleration ( ∑ F = ma ) .”
D ( mv )
For a nonconstant mass, force equals the change in momentum with change in time F = . For a
Dt
 m ( v1 − v 0 ) Dv 
constant mass, force equals mass times the change in velocity with respect to time  F = =m  .

 ( t1 − t0 ) Dt 

Acceleration is the change in velocity with respect to time. Therefore, another expression of Newton’s second law
for a constant mass is force equals mass times the acceleration (F = ma). Note that force, acceleration, momen-
tum, and velocity are all vector quantities; that is, they have both magnitude and direction.

The net force acting on an object is the sum of all of the forces acting on that object. Any sum is denoted
by the Greek letter sigma, ∑ F. xFor= ma
example,
x if F1, F2, and F3 are all acting on an object, then the net force acting

on the object is ∑ F = F1 + F2 + F3 . Newton’s second law of motion ( ∑ F = ma ) can also be broken down into
the following three component equations:



Fx = max ∑
Fy = may Fz = maz ∑
where Fx is the force in the x-direction and so on. Force and acceleration are vector quantities and mass is a
scalar quantity. Vector quantities have both magnitude and direction whereas scalars have only magnitude. A
force can be written as follows: F = (3i + 2j) N, which means the force is applied three units in the positive

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Newton’s Second Law of Motion

x-direction and two units in the positive y-direction (illustrated below at the left). There is another way to obtain
the component parts of a given vector. If, for example, the magnitude of the acceleration and the angle of motion
are known, then the component parts of the acceleration can be determined by using trigonometry (illustrated
below
F =at
(3ithe right).
+ 2j) N
y
F = (3i + 2j) N
|F| Fy = 2 N
y y a = a cos θ
x
x |F| Fy = 2 N
Fx = 3 N y a = a cos θ
x
x
Fx = 3 N
|a| ay = a sin θ
F = 32 + 22 = 13 N

F = 32 + 22 = 13 N θ |a| ay = a sin θ
x
θ
Newton’s second law answers the question of what happens to an object that has a nonzero net force acting x
on it. The following explanations are for a constant mass. One observation from Newton’s second law is that the
acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force acting on it. For example, if you are pushing a
block of metal across a frictionless horizontal surface with some horizontal force F, the block moves with some
acceleration a. If you apply a force of 3F on the same metal block, the acceleration of the block also triples.
Another observation is that the acceleration of an object is inversely proportional to its mass. Using the block
example from above, if one doubles the mass of the metal block and applies the same force F, the acceleration
of the block will be a .
2

Newton’s second law of motion can also be observed in the motion of an aircraft. If an airplane is not traveling

at a constant velocity  Dv ≠ 0  , then the airplane is accelerating or decelerating. For example, before takeoff,
 Dt 
 
the airplane is stationary (Newton’s first law). The throttle is then increased to overcome the inertia of the plane.
Because of the positive net force (thrust), the airplane accelerates (Newton’s second law).

Example Problem:

A jet with a mass of 250,000. kg is cruising at 241.30 m/s at a constant altitude. If the afterburners apply an
additional thrust of 50,000. N, what speed does the jet reach in 100. s?

Solution:
v − vi
This problem can be solved using Newton’s second law of motion, F = m Dv . F = m f , where F is the
Dt tf − t i
additional thrust (note that until the afterburners are turned on, the net force equals zero), vf is the velocity when

tf = 100. s, and vi = 241.30 m/h when ti = 0 s. The final velocity can be determined:

50,000. N = (250,000. kg)


(v f − 241.30 ) m/s
(100. − 0 ) s
vf = 261 m/s

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Newton’s Second Law of Motion

PROBLEMS

1. Fill in the blank below the illustration.

F1 F2

Plane 1 Plane 2

If F1 = F2 and m1 < m2, then a1 _______________

2. A 10,000. kg airplane touched the runway at 85.0 m/s. It took 30.0 s for the airplane to stop.
(a) What is the average acceleration of the plane?
(b) What force is applied to this airplane?
(c) What distance is needed to stop this plane in 30.0 s?

3. A Boeing 747 (m = 174,000 kg) undergoes an acceleration of a = (0.500i + 0.800j) m/s2. What is the
resultant force, F, and its magnitude?

4. A 5000. kg helicopter accelerates upward at 4.00 m/s2. What is the lift force exerted on this helicopter?

5. If the jet is cruising at 241.30 mph and accelerates at an average of 0.2700 m/s2 for 1000. s, what is
the jet’s final speed?

PHYSICS AND MATH


6. If a rocket that weighs 2.003105 kg is launched vertically from the Earth’s surface, what is the upward
acceleration if the engine produces a thrust of 3.003106 N?

7. If a rocket in space accelerates at 5.0 m/s2, what is the mass of the rocket if the engine produces a thrust
of 210,000 N?

8. A specific model rocket is designed to carry cargo in its tip. Calculate the mass of the cargo such that the
rocket can be launched vertically upward with the following characteristics:
mass of the rocket = 0.017 kg
ay = 136.36 m/s2
engine thrust = 3.2 N

9. At takeoff, a plane produces a force of 85,000 N at an angle of elevation of 60°.


The plane rises at a constant velocity in the vertical direction while continuing to accelerate in the horizontal
direction.
(a) What is the mass of the plane?
(b) What is the horizontal acceleration?
(c) How would this problem change if the angle of elevation was 45°?

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Newton’s Third Law of Motion

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Students will
• Evaluate forces in action/reaction

NATIONAL MATHEMATICS STANDARDS

Algebra
• Generalize patterns using explicitly defined and recursively defined variables
• Interpret representations of functions of two variables
• Approximate and interpret rates of change from graphical and numerical data
Problem Solving
• Solve problems that arise in mathematics and in other contexts
• Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies to solve problems

NATIONAL SCIENCE CONTENT STANDARD B


Motions and forces
• Objects change their motion only when a net force is applied. Laws of motion are used to calculate precisely
the effects of forces on the motion of objects. The magnitude of the change in motion can be calculated us
ing the relationship F = ma, which is independent of the nature of the force. Whenever one object exerts
force on another, a force equal in magnitude and opposite in direction is exerted on the first object.

INTRODUCTION

PHYSICS AND MATH


“For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.”

Another way to state Newton’s third law is that if two bodies interact, the force exerted on body 1 by body 2
is equal to and opposite the force exerted on body 2 by body 1: F12 = F21. For example, if you try to accelerate a
brick by kicking it, it hurts. The brick provides the same force, but opposite in direction, back to your foot as you
applied to kicking the brick. These forces are called action-reaction forces.

Newton’s third law is very important to aircraft. In order to create lift, the flow of air must be turned by a solid
object. During the lifting of a plane (see figure below at the left), the air is turned downward by both the upper
and lower surfaces of the wing. As the airflow is turned in one direction (action force), the lift force on the plane
is generated in the opposite direction (reaction force). Therefore, the more air that is pushed in the downward
direction by the wings, the greater the lift. Another demonstration of Newton’s third law is the acceleration of
an airplane (see figure below at the right). As the compressed fuel-air mixture burns, the engine dispenses hot
exhaust gasses out the nozzle. The resulting reaction force is a thrusting force in the opposite direction of the
exhaust flow. This action-reaction is the principle behind aircraft acceleration and lift.

Airfoil Foil deflected up


Jet engine Exhaust

Foil deflected down Reaction Action


force force

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Newton’s Third Law of Motion

PROBLEMS

1. If a sparrow (m = 0.0200 kg) and a Boeing 747 (m = 174,000 kg) collide head on, which experiences the
greater impact force? Which experiences the greater acceleration in opposite direction?

2. The thrust of a rocket is given by the equation


Dm
Thrust = v e + ( pe + po ) Ae
Dt

Dm
where = mass flow rate, ve = exhaust velocity, pe = exhaust pressure,
Dt
po = free-stream pressure, and Ae = exhaust area.

Fuel aboard a rocket is being ejected out the nozzle with a speed of 2750. m/s. The mass
rate of the ejected fuel is 909.09 kg/s.
(a) What is the thrust of the rocket (assume that the exhaust pressure is about equal to the free-stream
pressure)?
(b) What is the relationship between the direction of the exhaust and the direction of rocket travel?

3. (a) Derive a formula for the force acting on a rocket due to its weight. Use the variables given below:
Dme
fuel mass flow rate =
Dt
mass of the rocket = Mr
acceleration due to gravity = g
duration of observation = t

(b) Use 3(a) to calculate the force due to its weight acting on a 280,000 kg rocket with the given
characteristics:
exhaust mass flow rate = 1100 kg/s
duration of observation = 1 min
assume g is constant = 9.80 m/s2

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Displacement

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Students will
• Use rate equation to compute distance and time
• Evaluate acceleration as a change in velocity over time

NATIONAL MATHEMATICS STANDARDS


Algebra
• Generalize patterns using explicitly defined and recursively defined variables
• Interpret representations of functions of two variables
• Approximate and interpret rates of change from graphical and numerical data
Problem Solving
• Solve problems that arise in mathematics and in other contexts
• Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies to solve problems

INTRODUCTION

Ratios are used in evaluating the average velocity and average acceleration of an airplane. The average velocity
Dd d2 − d1
of a plane is the change in distance with respect to the change in time: v ave = = . From that equa-
Dt t2 − t1
d
tion comes the simple rate equation r = or equivalently, d = r ⋅ t (r is the rate). The average acceleration of a
t
Dv v 2 − v1
plane is the change in velocity to the change in time: aave = = .
Dt t2 − t1

PHYSICS AND MATH


Example problem:
A plane is traveling at a constant speed of 525 mph for 30. s. How far did the plane travel in those 30. s?

Solution:

The plane is traveling at a constant speed t so d = r ⋅ t is the appropriate relationship for this problem.

d = r ⋅ t

 1 hr 
d = ( 525 mph )  30. s ⋅
 3600 s 

d = 4.4 mi

This airplane traveled 4.4 mi in those 30. s.

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Displacement

PROBLEMS

1. The pilot observed that the airplane had a velocity of 505 mph. One minute later, the pilot observed a
velocity of 450 mph.
(a) What is the average acceleration over the 1.0 min?
(b) What does the negative sign indicate?

2. Determine how many miles it is from New York City, NY, to San Francisco, CA, if it took an airplane 5.0 h to
travel from one city to the other with an average velocity of 500. mph.

3. Before the afterburners are turned on, an airplane is traveling 475 mph. Twenty seconds after the after-
burners were turned on the plane is traveling 560 mph.
(a) What is the average acceleration of this airplane over those 20. s?
(b) How far does the plane travel in those 20. s?

4. In order for a Boeing 757 to take off, the airplane must have an average velocity of 190. mph. How long will
it take this plane to liftoff by the end of a 3000.-ft runway (1 mi = 5280 ft)?

5. A Boeing 767 has an approach speed of 250. mph. How long must the runway be in order to land this
plane if its maximum deceleration is 0.0120 mi/s2?

6. An airplane (m = 174,000 kg) is cruising at 241.40 m/s. The afterburners are ignited for 2.00 min providing
an average thrust of 20,000. N.
(a) What is the velocity of the airplane after those 2.00 min?
(b) How far did the airplane travel over those 2.00 min? (Assume the mass of the airplane stays constant.)

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Vectors

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Students will
• Evaluate vector forces on aircraft

NATIONAL MATHEMATICS STANDARDS


Geometry
• Analyze characteristics and properties of two- and three-dimensional geometric shapes and develop
mathematical arguments about geometric relationships
• Use trigonometric relationships to determine lengths and angle measures
Problem Solving
• Solve problems that arise in mathematics and in other contexts
• Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies to solve problems

NATIONAL SCIENCE CONTENT STANDARD B


Motions and forces
• Objects change their motion only when a net force is applied. Laws of motion are used to calculate precisely
the effects of forces on the motion of objects. The magnitude of the change in motion can be calculated
using the relationship F = ma, which is independent of the nature of the force. Whenever one object exerts
force on another, a force equal in magnitude and opposite in direction is exerted on the first object.

INTRODUCTION
A vector quantity has both magnitude and direction. Forces acting on an airplane are vectors. Below is an

PHYSICS AND MATH


illustration of the four major forces acting on an airplane.

Four forces.

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Vectors

Example problem:
The net force of an airplane is 2,000,000. N 30° above the horizontal. What is the net force on this airplane in
the vertical direction? What is the excess thrust (thrust – drag) of this airplane?
Solution:

2,000,000 N
Fy
30.°

Fy
Vertical net force (Fy): sin 30.° =
2, 000, 000.
Fy = 2,000,000. ⋅ sin 30.°
Fy = 1,000,000. N

Fx
Excess thrust (Fx): cos 30.° =
2, 000, 000.
Fx = 2,000,000. ⋅ cos 30.°
Fx = 1,700,000. N
PROBLEMS
1. A small airplane can travel with a speed of 150. mph with respect to the air. Determine the resultant velocity of
the plane (magnitude only) if it encounters a
(a) 20.0 mph headwind
(b) 20.0 mph tailwind
(c) 20.0 mph crosswind
(d) 60.0 mph crosswind

2. A small airplane has a cruising speed of 135 mph relative to the ground when there is no wind. The pilot
points the airplane at 35.0° north of east and flies for 2.00 hr. How far north and how far east is the plane from
its original location after the 2.00 hr?

3. The takeoff angle of an airplane is about 12°. If the takeoff speed of an airplane is 300. ft/s, approximately
how long will it take that plane to reach 14,000 ft if the angle of elevation and speed stays constant?

12°
4. An airplane initially moving eastward at 325 mph travels into an area where the wind is blowing 85 mph 25°
north of west.
(a) Determine the new speed of the airplane.
(b) Determine the new direction of the airplane.

5. An airplane flying with an airspeed of 225 m/s headed –120.° encounters a 100. m/s wind blowing toward the
plane at 15.0°.
(a) Draw an accurate diagram illustrating this situation.
(b) Determine the resulting velocity of the airplane.

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Ratios

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Students will
• Use ratios to compare quantities

NATIONAL MATHEMATICS STANDARDS


Understand numbers, ways of representing numbers, relationships among numbers, and number systems
• Understand and use ratios and proportions to represent quantitative relationships
Algebra
• Generalize patterns using explicitly defined and recursively defined variables
• Interpret representations of functions of two variables
Problem Solving
• Solve problems that arise in mathematics and in other contexts
• Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies to solve problems

INTRODUCTION
Many different types of mathematics are used in the evaluation of propulsion. One way that engineers
describe different characteristics of a plane is by using ratios. The ratio of a scalar quantity a to a scalar quantity
a
b is equal to a divided by b: ratio = .
b

Recall that a scalar quantity has only a magnitude, not a direction.


Below are just some of the ratios that engineers use when studying aircraft.

PHYSICS AND MATH


Visit http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/ratio.html for many more types of ratios, additional examples,
and interactive simulations on these topics.

• The Mach number M is the ratio of the speed of an object to the speed of sound in a gas. The Mach num-
ber defines the various flight regimes of an aircraft and the importance of the compressibility of the flow.
Note that because the temperature and density of the air decreases with increasing altitude, the speed of
sound also decreases with altitude.

Classifications of high-speed flight:


– Subsonic, M < 1
– Transonic, M = 1
– Supersonic, 1 < M < 3
– High supersonic, 3 < M < 5
– Hypersonic, M > 5
– High hypersonic, M >> 25

• The thrust-to-weight ratio of an aircraft determines the climb rate and performance of an aircraft. The thrust
to-weight ratio of an aircraft determines the g-loading on the payload and structure; g-loading refers to how
many times the force of gravity a structure can withstand.
• The aspect ratio of a wing is equal to the square of the wingspan divided by the wing area. This factor influ-
ences the induced drag and downwash effects on the lift of a wing. High-aspect-ratio wings are more
efficient than low-aspect-ratio wings, as first discovered by the Wright brothers in 1901 to 1902.
• Other ratios include glide ratio, lift-to-drag ratio, engine’s fuel-to-air ratio, and compression ratio.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Ratios

Example Problem:
What is the Mach number of a plane if the speed of sound is 761 mph and the plane is traveling at
500. mph? Classify this high-speed flight as subsonic, transonic, supersonic, or hypersonic.

Solution:
speed of object
The Mach number is defined as the following ratio: .
speed of sound
500. mph
Mach number =
761 mph
= 0.657

This airplane is traveling at a subsonic speed.

PROBLEMS
a
1. For each statement below, say something about the relationship between a and b if their ratio = .
b
If the ratio is equal to 1.0, then __________________________.
If the ratio is less than 1.0, then __________________________.
If the ratio is greater than 1.0, then __________________________.
If the ratio is nearly zero, then __________________________.
If the ratio is very large, then __________________________.

2. A typical cruise speed of a Boeing 757 is Mach 0.800. What is the typical cruise speed (in miles per hour) of a
Boeing 757 if the speed of sound at cruise altitude is 760. mph?

3. What is the thrust-to-weight ratio of a Boeing 747 (m = 174,000 kg) when a thrust of 215,000 N is generated?

4. What is the wingspan and wing area of a Boeing 757? What is the aspect ratio of a Boeing 757? (Use the
Internet to obtain the necessary data.)

5. (Optional) Visit the Web page in the Introduction, and write a description on one of the ratios not previously
mentioned in this section. Then create a word problem dealing with this ratio. Also include the solution.

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Air Density

When early aviators were learning to fly they The result is dramatic. In World War II, an unsu-
stayed fairly close to the ground, rarely going over percharged Avro Lancaster bomber had an operational
1000 ft. At low altitudes there is plenty of oxygen in the ceiling of 21,500 ft while a supercharged B–17G could
air for engines to be able to perform well. The atmo- operate up to 35,000 ft. The crew of the B–17G had to
sphere, however, is not uniform. As altitude increases, wear oxygen masks to fly at such high altitudes. By the
the density of the air decreases. This means that the end of the war, the B–29 bomber, which could fly up to
total number of gas molecules in every cubic foot of air 40,000 ft, had a pressurized cabin for crew comfort in
becomes less and less. Mountain climbers refer to this the cold, thin air.
as “thin air” because as they ascend there are fewer
gas molecules in each breath. Most climbers carry
bottles of oxygen when climbing very high.

It is the same with engines which need oxygen to


operate. As altitude increases, performance and power
decrease because less oxygen becomes available. By
the end of World War I, it became evident that the perfor-
mance ceiling of a piston-engine aircraft was not going
to be much above 20,000 ft. There is a definite combat
advantage in being able to fly higher than your enemy,
so programs were started to allow engines to operate
better in thinner air. These involved supercharging and B–17G bomber.
turbocharging, both of which are a means of forcing a
greater mass of air into the engine. In a supercharged
engine, air is drawn into a compressor and then forced Gas laws still apply at high altitudes, and the heat
into the cylinders of the engine. The power to drive the generated by compressing the air in a supercharger

PHYSICS AND MATH


supercharger is geared off of the engine, which does caused the air to expand. This creates more gas pres-
reduce some of the engine’s power. In turbocharging, sure, but the goal is not greater pressure but a greater
exhaust gases from the engine are allowed to flow over mass of air going into the engine, and heating makes it
a turbine that drives the compressor, which is a more less dense. Engineers solved this by adding intercool-
efficient arrangement, but there is some power loss due ers, which act like radiators and cool the compressed
to backpressure in the exhaust. The exhaust stroke of gas, decreasing the volume and thus increasing the
the engine must force exhaust gas to flow through the density.
turbine.
Finally, aircraft flying at high altitudes must fly at
high speeds to compensate for the loss of lift caused
by less dense air. Modern airliners use large turbofan
engines to be able to cruise at 500 mph at 30,000 ft.
Since the turbofan moves large volumes of air, they
can generate sufficient thrust in less dense air to main-
tain high speed.

Avro Lancaster bomber.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Air Density

SR–71 Blackbird.

One can foresee limits in altitude for air-


breathing engines as air becomes less dense. The world
record is 85,500 ft at Mach 3.3 by an SR–71 Blackbird
reconnaissance aircraft powered by two afterburning
turbo-ramjet engines. Much beyond this, one enters
the realm of rockets which must carry their own oxy-
gen in order to burn fuel.

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Noise

Sound waves are characterized by a wavelength, off or land. Finding ways to make airplanes fly more
frequency, and amplitude. The wavelength, λ (the quietly, however, is one of the most effective ways to
Greek letter lambda), is the physical distance between reduce airport noise pollution.
adjacent identical points on the wave, such as crest-
to-crest. The frequency, ν (the Greek letter nu), is the The various sound intensities listed in the chart
number of cycles per second. Multiplying the wave- below show that a jet airplane can generate an extreme
length times the frequency gives the speed of sound, amount of noise. There are many parts of an aircraft
c = λν. The height of the wave is called the amplitude that can make noise, but since the aircraft engine
and is the loudness of the sound. is one of the noisiest parts of the aircraft, designing
quieter engines continues to be a priority.
1 cycle
Decibel level
n Frequency Intensity,
(sound intensity Examples
W/m2
level, SIL)
+
0.000000000001 0 Threshold of hearing
0.00000000001 10 Rustling of leaves
0.0000000001 20 Quiet whisper
0.000000001 30 Whisper
Amplitude
Pressure

0.00000001 40 Mosquito buzzing


0 0.0000001 50 Normal conversation
0.000001 60 Air conditioner at 6 m
0.00001 70 Vacuum cleaner
0.0001 80 Alarm clock
0.001 90 Lawn mower
0.01 100 Subway

0.1 110 Auto horn at 1 m
1 120 Threshold of pain
l Wavelength 10 130 Machine gun
Distance 100 140

PHYSICS AND MATH


1000 150 Nearby jet airplane
Sound wave.

Sound is a major concern with aircraft propulsion. Researchers in the Acoustics Branch at NASA
Aircraft engines, whether internal combustion piston Glenn, working with engineers at universities and in
engines or jet turbine engines, generate power from the aircraft industry, are looking for ways to reduce the
expanding gases. Propellers and turbine fans move noise of aircraft engines. Finding ways to reduce engine
large volumes of air backwards in order to push air- noise without sacrificing aerodynamic performance of
craft forward. All these activities push on the surround- the engine is a real challenge. You are aware that cars
ing air causing compression and rarefaction of the air control exhaust noise by means of a muffler, but you
molecules. This produces pressure waves, which we may not be aware that this causes backpressure in
perceive as sound if they are strong enough and of the the exhaust system and reduces the engine’s effective
right frequencies. horsepower. This is why dragsters and racecars do not
have much in the way of mufflers; they need maximum
Generally, an aircraft achieves its best perfor- horsepower. The same is true in aircraft. Altering the
mance at cruise and spends most of its operating life geometry of an exhaust nozzle may reduce noise, but
at high altitude, away from populations, so the noise it it can also reduce engine thrust. Likewise, altering the
produces at this time is not a great concern. It is when number or orientation of fan blades or stator vanes in
an aircraft is landing, taxiing, and especially taking off an engine may help reduce noise, but it may also affect
at full power that noise becomes an issue. As air traffic the structural integrity of the engine.
grows, communities surrounding airports experience
an increase in noise pollution. There are many ways Since an aircraft engine is so complex, it
to combat airport noise pollution including residential helps to study parts of the engine individually. An
noise insulation programs, land use planning, modified engine’s exhaust jets are one dominant source of noise,
takeoff and landing procedures, and by restricting the and the noise generated by the rotating parts of the
number of flights and the time of day flights may take engine—like the fan and the compressor—are another.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Noise

Data from experiments on nozzles and fans are used


to develop new computer programs that engineers can
use to design quieter engines. When sound, pressure,
temperature, and velocity measurements are com-
pared against the calculations made to predict them,
engineers learn many things, such as whether a new
nozzle or fan design is quieter or whether calculations
are correct. Then they know if adjustments need to be
made in the designs or if the computer models should
be improved.

The teeth cut into the edge of the nozzle in the


picture below are often called chevrons and are used
to reduce jet exhaust noise. Tests at NASA Glenn con-
Test nozzle in AAPL.
firmed that chevrons are a practical way to reduce
noise. Data show that the chevrons change the way
that engine exhaust mixes with the surrounding air Have you ever been near an airport when an air-
and can help reduce noise. Developing new computer plane is landing and heard a “whine” above the roar
codes that model the complex mixing of the exhaust of the engine? The large bypass fan of an engine can
streams will help design engineers optimize their noz- produce two types of noise, tone noise (the whine)
zles by deciding how many chevron teeth should be and broadband noise (the roar). As the fan accelerates
cut, what shape they should be, and so forth. air down the fan duct, the flow is swirling because of
the spinning fan. This swirl causes loss of momentum
before the air exits the nozzle so it is straightened out
with a set of nonmoving vanes called stators. Broad-
band noise, which is sound at many different frequen-
cies, is created by the turbulence in the airflow. Tone
noise, which is sound at specific frequencies, is cre-
ated when the fan wakes (disturbances in the airflow
downstream of the fan blade) hit the stator vanes like
waves hitting the beach. Tone noise from a bypass fan
of an engine occurs at the blade passing frequency
(BPF) and its harmonics (whole-number multiples of the
BPF). The BPF is related to the number of fan blades
B and the rotational speed N (in revolutions per sec-
ond, or rps) by the equation BPF = BN, which equals
the frequency of the tone produced in cycles per sec-
Chevrons on Lear jet. ond (Hertz, Hz). Acoustic engineers are also interested
in the wavelengths of tones generated, as there is a
Scale models of aircraft exhaust nozzles are test- complex relationship between the length of the wave,
ed in NASA Glenn’s Aero-Acoustic Propulsion Labora-
tory (AAPL). It is a geodesic dome that houses sev-
eral experiments. The dome helps researchers collect
high-quality data in two ways: first by shielding the
experiments from outside noise sources (such as cars
driving by and airplanes flying overhead) and second
by preventing sound reflections within the dome from
contaminating the data. To prevent sound reflections
from contaminating the data, fiberglass wedges are
permanently installed on the inside of the dome and
movable wedges are used to cover the floor during a
test. All of these wedges absorb sound creating what
is called an anechoic chamber. The walls of the dome
also keep the noise of tests from bothering neighbors
living near the lab. AAPL.

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Noise

the diameter of the duct in the engine, and the noise form of the unwanted sound wave is generated. Since
produced. these two waves are exactly out of phase with each
other, when they meet they effectively cancel each
Tests in the NASA Glenn 9- by 15-Foot Low-Speed other out and eliminate the sound. NASA Glenn has
Wind Tunnel were conducted to investigate theories begun testing this concept with the Advanced Noise
that fan tone noise could be reduced by changing the Control Fan, a 4-ft-diameter fan specifically designed
number and orientation of the fan blades and stator to test this concept.
vanes. One-fifth-scale fan models were created: The
baseline fan stage with radial stators is shown in the
figure below, and the low-noise fan stage with the duct-
ing removed is shown in the inset. Tests confirmed that
tone noise could be reduced by carefully selecting the
number of rotor blades and stator vanes, sweeping the
stator vanes downstream (increasing the distance be-
tween the fan blades and the stator vanes), and lean-
ing the stator vanes (preventing the wake from hitting
just one stator vane at a time). These types of changes

Wavy-planform rotor on model helicopter in the wind tunnel.


Equivalent
flight angle,
degrees
12 Straight-planform rotor Wavy-planform rotor

Descent 8

Level
0
cruise

–4

Climb –8

PHYSICS AND MATH


0.15 0.20 0.25 0.30 0.35 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.30 0.35
Advance ratio Advance ratio

94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108


Sound pressure level, dB

Computer visualization of rotor blade noise.

One-fifth-scale model in 9- by 15-Foot


Reducing noise generated by complicated engine
Low-Speed Wind Tunnel.
parts is challenging and interesting work. It takes the
reduce noise by altering the way the fan wakes interact efforts of many people to design, build, and run the
with the stator without adding a lot of weight to the experiments and analyze the data. These include peo-
engine or increasing engine complexity. ple skilled in the trades, engineers, mathematicians,
scientists, and computer programmers, to name a few.
Working as a team they continue to develop new theo-
Noise reduction is an ongoing quest for propulsion
engineers. Tests conducted at NASA Langley led to the
design of a seamless “sound-absorbing” inlet liner by
BFGoodrich, which reduced fan tones in front of the
aircraft by up to 15 decibels (dB). Other research at
Langley demonstrated the noise reduction capability
of “wavy” rotor blades for helicopters as shown at top
right along with a computer visualization of the data
compared to the usual straight rotors.

One interesting way to reduce noise is called


“active noise reduction.” In this method, an inverted
Advanced Noise Control Fan.

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ries, new computer programs for calculating aerody-
namic and acoustic performance, and new techniques
to make quieter engines—improving the quality of life
for those living and working near aircraft.

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Noise

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Students will
• Understand the relationship between sound intensity and distance
• Investigate factors which cause noise in turbine engines

NATIONAL MATHEMATICS STANDARDS


Algebra
• Understand patterns, relations, and functions
– Understand and perform transformations such as arithmetically combining, composing, and inverting com-
monly used functions, using technology to perform such operations on more-complicated symbolic
expressions
– Understand and compare the properties of classes of functions, including exponential, polynomial, rational,
logarithmic, and periodic functions
• Represent and analyze mathematical situations and structures using algebraic symbols
– Understand the meaning of equivalent forms of expressions, equations, inequalities, and relations
– Write equivalent forms of equations, inequalities, and systems of equations and solve them with
fluency—mentally or with paper and pencil in simple cases and using technology in all cases
– Use symbolic algebra to represent and explain mathematical relationships
Problem Solving
• Solve problems that arise in mathematics and in other contexts
• Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies to solve problems

INTRODUCTION

PHYSICS AND MATH


One of the major concerns with aircraft noise is the level of sound experienced in relationship to distance
from the airport. As sound moves out from a source, the compression waves are transferred from air molecule to
air molecule. One way to quantify this is to look at a measure called “sound intensity.” The intensity is the rate of
the energy transfer through a unit area of the plane wave. The rate of energy transfer is power, so it follows that
intensity I is a measure of the power of the sound P per unit area, A:
DE
I= Dt
A
P
=
A
Since the SI unit for power is the watt, then the units of intensity I are watts/area, or W/m2. If it is assumed
that the sound wave propagates evenly over a spherical area, then the surface area of a sphere is used to write:
P
I=
4πr 2
This shows that as the distance r increases, the intensity of the sound decreases.

Sound intensity level (SIL) is a related measure with the units decibels. It is the logarithmic measure of the
sound intensity as compared to the intensity of the softest sound a person can hear, designated Iref (the reference
intensity). The value of Iref is 1.00310–12 W, or 0 dB.

 I 
SIL = 10.0  log10 
 Iref 

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Noise

Example problem:
You are standing 50.0 m away from a jet engine where the SIL is measured at 130. dB. What is the power of
the sound at that distance?

Solution:
 I 
SIL = 10.0  log10 
 Iref 

Substituting values gives


 I 
130. dB = 10.0  log10 −12 
 1× 10 

13.0 dB = log10 I − log10 10−12

13.0 dB = log10 I − ( −12.0)

1.00 dB = log10 I

I = 10.0 W/m2

Since P = IA or P = I (4πr2)

then P = (10.0)(4)(3.14)(50.0)2

P = 314,000 W

PROBLEMS

1. Given a sound intensity of 3.143105 W/m2, what would the SIL be at a distance of 8050 m (5.00 mi)?

2. How far away would you need to be from a sound source with 2.503105 W of power in order to have the
SIL be 75.0 dB?

3. An airplane baggage loader shouts to a coworker to try to be heard over engine noise. If the sound he
produces has 3.10310–3 W power and the coworker is 5.00 m away, what is the sound intensity when it
reaches the coworker?

4. How close to your coworker would you need to be to be able to shout above the whine of a jet if its SIL
was 110. dB?

5. If the fan in a scale model engine rotates at 12,657 rpm and if it has 22 blades, what is the BPF?

6. Wavelength is related to frequency by the equation λ = c/ν. What is the wavelength of a tone from a BPF of
4640 cycles per second (4640 hertz, or Hz)?

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THE FUTURE

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THE FUTURE
Engineers and engine designers are never con-
tent to stop “pushing the envelope” in aviation pro-
pulsion. Since the early days of the Wright brothers’
12-hp 4-cylinder engine they have gone on to develop jet
engines that produce over 90,000 lb of thrust. The
power of engines of the future will only be limited by
being able to develop materials that can withstand
extremely high temperatures and stresses required by
more powerful engines.

Future engineers will find many opportunities to


develop engines with increased efficiency, reduced
mass, and exotic materials. New fuels, reduced noise,
and reductions in pollution await further study, testing,
and design. As NASA seeks to return humans to space,
as air travel continues to expand, and as humans seek
to fly higher, faster, and farther, propulsion will play a
major role in the design for the vehicles of the future.

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Rocket Activity

POP BOTTLE ROCKETS DEMONSTRATION

INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Students will
• Apply Newton’s Third Law
• Evaluate energy available in different compounds
• Recognize the need for oxygen in combustion

NATIONAL SCIENCE CONTENT STANDARD B


Chemical reactions
• Chemical reactions may release or consume energy. Some reactions, such as burning fossil fuels, release
large amounts of energy by giving off heat and emitting light.
Motions and forces
• Objects change their motion only when a net force is applied. Laws of motion are used to calculate precisely
the effects of forces on the motion of objects. The magnitude of the change in motion can be calculated
using the relationship F = ma, which is independent of the nature of the force. Whenever one object exerts
force on another, a force equal in magnitude and opposite in direction is exerted on the first object.

INTRODUCTION
This activity demonstrates the thrust that can be generated by burning a fuel and demonstrates Newton’s
laws. Unlike 2-liter water bottle rockets in which the propulsion pressure is created by ejecting water under pres-
sure, the combustion of alcohol in this activity creates heated gases that expand out of a nozzle and propel the
bottle just like actual rockets.

MATERIALS
• 20-oz pop or soda bottles,* clean and dry, with lids
• Electric drill
• Long-necked butane lighter
• Rubbing alcohol
• Fishing line or a tripod rocket launcher
• Plastic straws
• Piece of wire coat hanger, ≈10 in. long

ROCKET ACTIVITY
• Piece of aluminum foil, 6 by 6 in.
• Pliers
• Tape
• Fire extinguisher
• Waste bottle with lid
• Safety goggles 20-oz pop bottle.

* ONLY USE POP OR SODA BOTTLES, AS THEY ARE DESIGNED TO WITHSTAND PRESSURE. DO NOT USE
WATER BOTTLES OR ANY OTHER NONCARBONATED DRINK BOTTLES.

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Rocket Activity

PROCEDURE
1. Put on safety goggles.
2. Using a pair of pliers, hold the lid on a scrap piece of wood and drill a 3/8-in. hole in the center of the
bottle’s lid. DO NOT DRILL A SMALLER HOLE OR THE BOTTLE MAY CRACK—OR WORSE, EXPLODE.
3. Tape the straw along the length of the bottle to
serve as a launch guide. Heat sheild
4. Using the pliers, bend the coat hanger into a
U shape, with the base of the U about 2 in. long.
Tape one side of the U to a straw and slide this
onto the string so the base of the U points down
range. This will serve as the rocket carrier.
5. Roll the piece of aluminum foil around a pencil,
then remove it and slide the foil onto the string to
act as a heat shield.
6. Tie one end of the string to a chair or other solid
object, and then tie off the other end at least 20 ft
away so it is level.
7. Put on the lid with the hole, and use an eyedrop-
per to add 2 or 3 dropperfuls of alcohol to the
bottle.
8. Cover the hole with your finger, and shake the Launching horizontal rocket.
bottle 20 to 30 times to vaporize the alcohol.
9. Drain ALL of the unevaporated liquid out the hole
in the lid and into the waste bottle. Tightly cap
the waste bottle.
WARNING: ALCOHOL VAPOR IS VERY FLAMMABLE SO IT IS VERY IMPORTANT TO HAVE ALL
ALCOHOL CONTAINERS CAPPED AND AWAY FROM THE LAUNCH AREA BEFORE ANY FLAMES ARE
LIT. STUDENTS SHOULD NOT BE CLOSE, AND A FIRE EXTINGUISHER SHOULD BE AT HAND IF THERE
IS A PROBLEM.
10. Slide the bottle’s straw onto the carrier until the straw is up against the base of the U. Slide the aluminum
foil heat shield so that it is above the lid (see above figure).
11. With safety goggles on, bring the lighter to the hole and light. With a “whoosh” the rocket should shoot
down the string.

VARIATIONS
1. It is possible to shoot the rockets vertically (see
figure to the right). You will need a model rocket
launch rail. You will also need to do this outdoors
in an open area with no flammable material
under the launch rail. Again, be sure to allow any
liquid alcohol to drain before lighting and be sure
there is nothing flammable below the rocket.
2. You may also want to try 2-L pop bottles for
more altitude.
3. Have students tape or glue lightweight fins on
their rockets for stability.
4. Try a launch with no lid screwed on the bottle, or
try hole sizes larger than 3/8 in. (DO NOT USE Launching vertical rocket.
HOLES SMALLER THAN 3/8 IN. BECAUSE OF
PRESSURE CONCERNS.)
5. Chemistry students can be given the heat of formation for different alcohols and then calculate the heat of
the reaction.
6. Investigate the fuel/air ratio by trying different numbers of drops of alcohol and measuring the distance
traveled. (Use a fresh bottle each time.)

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Rocket Activity

7. Students can weigh bottles, time flights, measure distances traveled down the line, or determine altitudes
on a vertical launch. (http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/TRC/Rockets/altitude_tracking.html)
8. Whether vertically or horizontally, have students do a second launch with the same bottle simply by adding
more alcohol. Ask them to explain the results.

DISCUSSION

The reaction that takes place within the bottle is between the isopropyl alcohol and oxygen and is very
exothermic:

2 C3H7OH + 9 O2 → 6 CO2 + 8 H2O + heat

The amount of heat involved can be found by application of Hess’ Law:

ΔH = Σ ΔHof products – Σ ΔHof reactants

For the reaction above, the standard heats of formation are


ΔHof of isopropyl alcohol = –272.8 kJ/mol
o
ΔH f of oxygen = 0.0 kJ/mol
o
ΔH f of carbon dioxide = –393.5 kJ/mol
ΔHof of water = –285.8 kJ/mol

To calculate the heat of reaction,

6 ( −393.5 ) + 8 ( −285.8 ) − 2 ( −272.8 ) + 9 ( 0.0 )  = −4101.8 kJ 2 mo


ol C3H7 OH

The inside of the 2-liter bottle is saturated with isopropyl alcohol vapor. This is mixed with air (20 percent
oxygen), so the reaction is between gases and thus is very fast. The pressure and volume of the gases produced
increase greatly with the heat of reaction, and the gases are forced out the nozzle, creating thrust and launching
the bottle according to Newton’s Third Law. Once the bottle has been launched, a second try fails to do much
since most of the oxygen was used up in the first launch. You might want to have students suggest what they
would have to do to make a successful second launch using the same bottle.

If the bottle is tried without the lid, the thrust produced is expended very quickly out the larger opening.
Since power is the rate at which the energy change is taking place, this rocket has less power than one with
a small hole in the lid where the gas is expelled over a longer period of time. This is a good demonstration of
Newton’s first law, attempting to overcome inertia. Students might suggest using a hole smaller than 3/8 inches
diameter, but too much restriction would allow pressure to build up inside the bottle that could be dangerous and

ROCKET ACTIVITY
split the bottle.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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TEACHERS SECTION

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Solutions

GAS LAW PROBLEMS WORKED OUT

Boyle’s Law

1. Since the compression ratio is 25:1, the highest pressure will be 25 3 745 mm, or 8900 mm.

2. V1P1 = V2P2 (0.90 in3) (775 mm) = (x in3) (7926 mm) x = 0.088 in3

3. V1P1 = V2P2 (900 ft3)(x atm) = (35.0 ft3) (28.8 atm) x = 1.11 atm

4. Since the compression ratio is 8.5:1, the pressure at the combustor is 8.5 3 740. mm = 6290 mm.

V1P1 = V2P2
(x ft3) (740. mm) = (1.0 ft3) (6290 mm)

x = 0.088 ft3

Charles’s Law
For all problems, °C must first be converted to K by adding 273, since all calculations involving gases must be
done in absolute temperature.

1. V V 12, 500 L 26, 600 L


1
= 2 =
T1 T2 308 K T2

T2 = 655 K

2. 250. L O  16 L CO2  = 160. L CO at 25 °C


2  2
 25 L O2 

160. L CO x L CO2
2
=
298 K 673 K

TEACHERS SECTION
x = 361 L

3. Station 2: 900. ft3 x ft3 x = 900. ft3


=
282 K 282 K
900. ft3 x ft3
Station 3: = x = 1810 ft3
282 K 567 K
900. ft3 x ft3
Station 4: = x = 2020 ft3
282 K 634 K
900. ft3 x ft3
Station 5: = x = 1170 ft3
282 K 368 K
900. ft3 x ft3
Station 8: = x = 1170 ft3
282 K 282 K

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Solutions

Charles’ Law Continued

Tt3 567 K
4. Compressor: = = 2.01 times
Tt 2 282 K

Burner: Tt 4 634 K
= = 1.12 times
Tt3 567 K

Turbine: Tt5 368 K


= = 0.580 times
Tt 4 634 K

Tt8 368 K
Nozzle: = = 1.00 times
Tt5 368 K

(a) Compressor

(b) Compressing the gas raises the temperature

Tt8 368 K
(c) = = 1.30 times
Tt5 282 K

(d) Since the value is greater than one, the overall work by the gas is greater than the work done to the gas, so
the engine produces thrust.

Gay-Lussac’s Law
For all problems, degrees Celsius must first be converted to kelvins by adding 273, since all calculations involv-
ing gases must be done in absolute temperature.
P1 P2 340 psi x psi
1. (a) = =
T 1 T2 297 K 403 K
x = 461 psi

P P 340 psi 5000 psi


(b) 1 = 2 =
T
1 T2 297 K xK
x = 4370 K (4097 °C)

P P 29.3 atm x atm


2. 1 = 2 =
T1 T2 962 K 295 K
x = 8.98 atm; pressure needs to be decreased

P P 2.20 atm x atm


3. 1 = 2 =
T

1 T 2 439 K 295 K
x = 1.48 atm

P1 P2 742 psi x psi


4.
= = x = 1190 psi
T1 T2 966 K 1553 K

 1 atm 
1190 psi   = 81.0 atm
 14.7 psi 

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Solutions

Hess’s Law

1. (a) Heptane, C7H16, DHof = –44.9 kcal/mol

C7H16 + 11 O2 → 7 CO2 + 8 H2O

ΔH = [7(–94.0) + 8(–68.3)] – [–44.9 + 11(0.0)] = –1160. kcal/mol

(b) Octane, C8H18, DHof = –49.8 kcal/mol

2 C8H18 + 25 O2 → 16 CO2 + 18 H2O

ΔH = [16(–94.0) + 18(–68.3)] – [2(–44.9) + 25(0.0)] = –2634 kcal/2 mol = –1317 kcal/mol

(c) 2,2,3-Trimethylpentane, C8H18, DHof = –52.6 kcal/mol

2 C8H18 + 25 O2 → 16 CO2 + 18 H2O

ΔH = [16(–94.0) + 18(–68.3)] – [2(–52.6) + 25(0.0)] = –2634 kcal/2 mol = –1317 kcal/mol

 1 mol   1320 kcal 


2. 250 g    = 2880 kcal/mol
 114.188 g   1 mol 

3. In order to compare the fuels, one must find calories per gram for each fuel:

1160 cal/mol 1320 cal/mol


Heptane = = 11.6 cal/g Octane = = 11.6 cal/g
100.20 g/mol 114.19 g/mol

1320 cal/mol
2,2,3-Trimethylpentane = = 11.6 cal/g
114.19 g/mol

To three significant digits, all are equivalent in the number of calories per gram of fuel burned.

4. First, find cal/g for the burning of the ethanol:

2 C2H5OH + 7 O2 → 4 CO2 + 6 H2O

TEACHERS SECTION
ΔH = [4(–94.0) + 6(–68.3)] – [2(–56.2) + 7(0.0)] = –673 cal/2 mol = –337 cal/mol

336.7 cal/mol
Ethanol: = 7.308 cal/g
46.07 g/mol

For 10%, 0.1(7.308 cal/g) = 0.7308 cal/g

1317 cal/mol
2,2,3-Trimethylpentane: = 11.53 cal/g
114.19 g/mol

For 90%, 0.9(11.53 cal/g) = 10.38 cal/g

Adding the two together gives 11.11 cal/g, which is less than pure 2,2,3-trimethylpentane.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Solutions

NEWTON’S LAWS PROBLEMS WORKED OUT

First Law of Motion

1. Zero

2. W = mg
= (109,000 kg)(9.80 m/s2)
= 1,070,000 N

The force acting on the plane due to its weight is 1,070,000 N.

3. Because the plane is not moving in the vertical direction, the lift force is equal to the force due to its weight,
1,070,000 N.

4. Because the plane is traveling at a constant speed, the thrust equals the drag. Thus, the drag force is
104,525 N.

5. Slow down

6. If a person does not have their seatbelt on during the accident, then there is no force holding the person
back in their seat. The inertia of the person keeps the person moving in the direction of the car’s original
movement. As a result, the person will be thrown with the same speed of the car before impact. Since the
car is no longer moving, the person will collide with some part of the car and be injured.

Second Law of Motion

1. If F1 = F2 and m1 < m2 , then a1 > a2.


Dv
2. (a) aave =
Dt
vf − vi
=
tf − t i
0 m/s − 85.0 m/s
=
30.0 s

= −2.83 m/s2

The negative acceleration indicates that the plane is slowing down.

(b) F = ma
= (10,000. kg)(2.83 m/s2)
= –28,300 N

The negative force indicates that the force is acting in the opposite direction of the plane’s movement.

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Solutions

(c) 85.0 m/s + 0 m/s df − di


=
2 30.0 s

1280 m = df – 0 m

The runway needs to be 1280 m.

3. F = ma

= (174, 000 kg) ( 0.500i + 0.800 j) m/s2 
 
(
= 87, 000i + 139, 000 j N )

F = 87, 0002 + 139,0002

= 164, 000 N

4. If the helicopter is accelerating upward at 4 m/s2, then the helicopter is overcoming the 9.80 m/s2 due to
gravity. Thus the total acceleration of the helicopter is 13.8 m/s2. The lift force is then calculated as follows:


F = ma

(
= ( 5000. kg) 13.80 m/s2 )
= 69,000 N

Dv
5. aave =
Dt
vf − vi
=
tf − t i

v f − 241.30 m/s
0.2700 m/s2 =
1000. s − 0 s

TEACHERS SECTION
v f = 511.3 m/s

6. F = ma
3.003106 N = (2.003105 kg) a

Note that the rocket needs to overcome the acceleration due to gravity, so the upward acceleration is just

15.0 m/s2 – 9.80 m/s2 = 5.2 m/s2

7. F = ma
210,000 N = m(5.0 m/s2)

m = 42,000 kg

Note that when a rocket is in space, the force due to its weight is zero.

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


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Solutions

8. mtotal = mcargo + mrocket


F = m a
total
thrust − weight = F
thrust − mtotalg = mtotala
thrust = mtotala + mtotalg
= mtotal ( a + g )
3.2 N = mtotal ( 9.8
80 + 136.36 ) m/s
mtotal = 0.022 kg

mtotal = mcargo + mrocket


mcargo = mtotal − mrocket
mcargo = ( 0.022 − 0.017 ) kg

mcargo = 0.005 kg

9.

85,000 N
Fy = 85,000 sin 60° N
= 73,612.16 N

60°

Fx = 85,000 cos 60° N


= 42,500 N

(a) There is no net acceleration in the y-direction. As a result, the only force acting on this plane in the
y-direction is due to its weight. m = (
85, 000 ) ( sin 60° )
9.8 m/s2
Fy = may m=
( 85, 000 ) ( sin 60° )
= 7511.44 kg
9.8 m/s2
= 7511.44 kg
(b) Fx = max
85,000 cos 60° = (7511.44 kg) ax
ax = 5.66 m/s2

(c) If the angle of elevation were 45°, Fy = Fx. The mass would be less (m = 6133.07 kg), and the accelera-
tion in the x-direction would be greater (ax = 9.80 m/s2).

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Solutions

Third Law of Motion

1. Since the sparrow and the plane constitute an action-reaction pair, the force the sparrow exerts on the
plane is equal to the force the plane exerts on the sparrow. Since F = ma, msparrow a = mplane a. This
means a will be huge for the sparrow and it will undergo a massive, lethal decelleration while a will be tiny
for the plane and no one onboard will notice.

Dm
2. (a) Thrust = v e + ( pe + po ) Ae
Dt

Dm
where = mass flow rate
Dt
v e = exhaust velocity
pe = exhaust pressure
po = free-stream pressure
Ae = exhaust area

Dm
Because pe ≈ po, (pe + po) Ae ≈ 0. Thus, thrust ≈ ve .
Dt
Thrust ≈ (909.09 kg/s)(2750 m/s)
≈ 2.5003106 N

(b) The direction of the exhaust is opposite to the direction of the rocket travel. The thrust is opposite in
direction but equal in magnitude.

 Dme 
3. (a) FW =  Mr − t g
 Dt 

(b) From part 3(a),

 Dme 
FW =  Mr − t g
 Dt 

So Fw = [280,000 kg – (1100 kg/s)60 s](9.80 m/s2)

TEACHERS SECTION

= 2,100,000 N

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Solutions

PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS PROBLEMS WORKED OUT

Displacement, Rate, and Acceleration

Dv
1. aave =
Dt
vf − vi
=
tf − t i
450 mph − 505 mph
=
(1.0 − 0 ) min  60 min 
1 hr
 
= −3300 mi/hr 2

The negative sign indicates the airplane is slowing down, or decelerating.

Dd
2. v ave =
Dt

d − di
500. mph = f
tf − t i
d −0
500. mph = f
5.0 hr
df = 2500 mi

The distance from New York City, NY, to San Fransisco, CA, is about 2500 mi.

Dv
3. (a) aave =
Dt
vf - vi
=
tf - t i
560 mph − 475 mph
=
 1 hr 
20. s  
 3600 s 
= 15,300 mi/hr 2
= 0.0012 mi/s2

The average acceleration is 0.0012 mi/s2.


(b) v ave =
( 560 + 475 ) mph = df − 0
2  1 hr 
20. s  
 3600 s 
df = 2.9 mi

The plane travels 2.9 mi in those 20. s.

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Solutions

Dd
4. v ave =
Dt
 1 mi 
( 3000. ft − 0 ft )  
 5280 ft 
190. mph =
tf − 0

tf = 0.0
00299 hr
= 10.8 s

5. aave =
( −0.0120 + 0 ) mi/s2 = − 0.00600 mi/s2 = −77, 800 mi/hr 2
2

Dv
aave =
Dt
0 − 250 mph
−77, 800 mi hr 2 =
tf − 0

tf = 0.00321 hr
= 11.6 s

Dd
v ave =
Dt
250. mph + 0 d − di
= f
2 tf − t i
df − 0
125 mph =
 1 hr 
11.6 s  
 3600 s 

df = 0.403 mi

TEACHERS SECTION
The runway needs to be 0.403 mi.

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Solutions

6. (a) From Newton’s Second Law of Motion, F = ma. Assuming that the mass stays
constant, Fave = maave.
20, 000. N = (174, 000 kg) aave
aave = 0.115 mi/s2

Dv
aave =
Dt
v f − 241.40 m/s
0.115 m/s2 =
 60s 
( 2.00 min − 0 )  1 min 
 
255 m/s = v f

The velocity of the airplane after those 2 minutes was 255 m/s.

Dd
(b) v ave =
Dt
255 m/s + 241.40 m/s df − 0
=
( 2.00 min− 0 )  1 min 
2 60 s
 

df = 29, 800 m

The plane traveled 29,800 m in those 2 minutes.

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Solutions

PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS PROBLEMS WORKED OUT

Vectors

1. (a) 150. – 20.0 = 130. mph



(b) 150. + 20.0 = 170. mph
151 mph
(c) Using the Pythagorean Theorem, 20.0 mph
150.2 + 20.02 = (hypotenuse)2
Hypotenuse = 151 150.0 mph

The resultant velocity is 151 mph.

162 mph
(d) Using the Pythagorean Theorem, 60.0 mph
150.2 + 60.02 = (hypotenuse)2
Hypotenuse = 161.6 150.0 mph

The resultant velocity is 162 mph.

2. 135 mph
N
35.0°
E

North
N
sin 35.0° =
135
N = 77.4 mph

To calculate the north distance, multiply the magnitude of the north velocity vector by 2.00 hr:

TEACHERS SECTION
(77.4 mph)(2.00 hr) = 154.9 mi

East
E
cos 35.0o =
135
E = 111 mph

To calculate the east distance, multiply the magnitude of the east velocity vector by 2.00 hr:

(111 mph)(2 hr) = 222 mi

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Solutions

3. 300. ft/s
14,000 ft
12°

vy
sin12° =
300. ft/s
v y = 62 ft/s

Dd df − di
v avey = =
Dt tf − t i
14, 000 ft − 0
62.4 ft/s =
tf − 0

tf = 226 s

It will take this airplane about 226 s to reach 14,000 ft.

4.
N

85 mph u x
85 mph

325 mph
25° 25°

(a) Use the Law of Cosines to determine the new speed (x):
x2 = 3252 + 852 – 2(325)(85) cos 25°
x2 = 63,000

x = 250 mph

(b) Use the Law250 of Sines85 to determine θ:


=
250 sin 25 85° sin θ
250 = 85
sin 25°85 = (sin
sinθ25° )
° = sin θ
sin 25
85 ( sin 25° 250 ) θ
sin
85 ( sin 25° ) = sin θ
250 = sin θ = 0.144
250 =−01.144
θ = sin = 0.(144
0.144 )
θ = sin−−11 ( 0.144 )
θ = sin ( 0.144 )
θ ≈ 8 .0 °
θ ≈ 8 .0 °
θ ≈ 8 .0 °
The plane is traveling about 8.0° north of its original eastward direction.

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Solutions

5. (a) N

120.°
45.0° 225 m/s
X

100. m/s 100. m/s

15.0° 120.°

(b) To solve for x, first determine the various angles as illustrated in the diagram. Then use the Law of
Cosines:

x2 = 2252 + 100.2 – 2(225)(100.) cos 45°
x2 = 28,800
x = 170. m/s

The resultant velocity of this plane is about 170. m/s.

TEACHERS SECTION

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Solutions

PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS PROBLEMS WORKED OUT

Ratios

1. a=b
a<b
a>b
a << b
a >> b

speed of object
2. Mach number =
speed of sound
speed of object
0.800 =
760. mph

Speed of object = 608 mph



The typical cruise speed of a Boeing 757 is 608 mph.

215, 000 N
3. Thrust-to-weight ratio = = 0.126
(174, 000 kg) ⋅ ( 9.80 m/s2 )

4. Wingspan of a Boeing 757 = 124 ft, 10 in. =124.83 ft


Wing area = 1994 ft2

wingspan2
Aspect ratio =
wing area

=
(124.83 ft )
2

1994 ft 2

= 7.815

5. Answers will vary.

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Solutions

PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS PROBLEMS WORKED OUT

Noise

1. First find intensity, I:

P P
I= =
A 4πr 2

I=
( 314, 000 W )
4 ( 3.14 )( 8050 m )
2

= 0.000386 W m2

Now find SIL:

SIL = 10.0 (log10 I − log10 Iref )

(
= 10.0 log10 I − log10 10−12 )
= 10.0 log10 0.00386 − (−12 )
= 10.0 (−3.41 + 12 )

SIL = 85.9 dB

2. First find intensity, I:

75.0 dB = 10.0 (log10 I − log10 Iref )

(
= 10.0 log10 I − log10 10−12 )

7.50 dB = log10 I + 12
log10 I = −4.50

I = 0.0000316 W m2 (or 3.16 × 10 −5 W m2 )

TEACHERS SECTION
Now calculate the distance, r:

P P
I= =
A 4πr 2
250, 000
3.16 × 10−5 =
4 ( 3.14 ) r 2

r = 6.30 × 108

r = 25,100 m ( orr 15.6 mi )

Note: This would hold true if there were a direct line of sight and atmospheric absorbtion were neglected.
Generally, there are any number of obstructions such as trees and buildings that would disrupt sound
transmission.

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Solutions

3. First find intensity, I:

P
I=
A
P
=
4πr 2
3.10 × 10−3
=
4 ( 3.14 )( 5.00 )
2

= 9.87 × 10−6 W/m2

Now calculate the sound intensity level, SIL:

SIL = 10.0 (log10 I − log10 Iref )

(
= 10.0 log10 9.87 × 10−6 − log10 10−12 )
= 10 (−5.01 + 12.0 )

SIL = 69.9 dB

Note: He would not be heard.

4. First find intensity, I:

110. dB = 10 (log10 I − log10 Iref )


(
= 10 log10 I − log10 10−12 )
11.0 dB = log10 I + 12
log10 I = −1.00

I = 0.100

Now calculate the distance, r:

P
I=
A
P
=
4πr 2
3.10 × 10−3
0.100 =
4 (3.14 )r 2
r 2 = 0.00247
r = 0.00247

r = 0.0497 m

At this distance SILperson = SILjet, so he would need to be closer than 0.0497 m.


Note: 0.0497 m = 4.97 cm = 1.96 in. He would have to yell right in his ear!

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Solutions

5. BPF = BN
 1 min 
= 22 (12,657 rpm ) 
 60 s 
= 4640 cycles/s
= 4640 Hz

343 m/s
6. λ =
4640 cycles/s
= 0.0739 m

TEACHERS SECTION

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REFERENCE

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Units of Measure

The following is a list of the units of measure used with the quantities presented in this guide.

Note: Metric units may be preceded by a prefix indicating multiples of the unit:
For example,

k = kilo = 1000 times; thus kW = kilowatts = 1000 watts


c = centi = 0.01 times; cm = centimeters = 0.01 meters
m = milli = 0.001 times; mg = milligrams = 0.001 grams

atm atmosphere pressure


°C degree Celsius temperature
cal calorie energy
dB decibel sound
°F degree Fahrenheit temperature
ft foot length
g gram mass
hp horsepower power
hr hour time
Hz Hertz frequency
in. inch length
K kelvin temperature
L liter volume
lb pound mass
m meter length
mi mile length
min minute time
mol mole quantity
mm Hg millimeters of mercury pressure
mph miles per hour velocity
N Newton force
psi pounds per square inch pressure
rpm revolutions per minute velocity
rps revolutions per second velocity
s second time
W watt power

REFERENCE

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Glossary

ABSOLUTE TEMPERATURE Temperature as measured on a scale in which the hypothetical lowest limit
of physical temperatures is assigned the value zero (absolute zero), such
as the Kelvin scale.

ACCELERATION The time rate of change of velocity with respect to magnitude or direction;
the derivative of velocity with respect to time.

ACOUSTIC Pertaining to the sense or organs of hearing, to sound, or to the science of


sound.

AFTERBURNER A device placed within, or attached to the exit of, a jet-engine exhaust
pipe to produce afterburning.

ALKANE Any of a series of saturated aliphatic hydrocarbons with the general


formula CnH2n+2.

ALLOY A substance composed of two or more metals.

ANECHOIC Neither having nor producing echoes.

ASPECT RATIO Equal to the square of the wingspan divided by the wing area.

BOTTOM DEAD CENTER The point in the travel of a piston that creates the greatest volume in the
cylinder.

BYPASS AIR In a turbofan engine, this is the air that is pushed backwards by the fan
that does not go through the core of the engine.

CARBURETOR A device for mixing vaporized fuel with air to produce a combustible or
explosive mixture, as for an internal combustion engine.

CATHODE The electron-emitting electrode of an electron tube. It is the positive


electrode.

CERAMIC Any of various hard, brittle, heat-resistant, and corrosion-resistant


materials made by shaping and then firing a nonmetallic mineral, such as
clay, at a high temperature.

CHEVRON A device shaped like an inverted “V” that, when placed on a nozzle, allows
jet exhaust to better mix with the outside air.

COMBUSTOR The apparatus in a jet engine for initiating and sustaining combustion,
consisting of the igniter, fuel-injection system, combustion chamber, and
flame holder.
REFERENCE

COMPRESSOR A machine for reducing volume and increasing pressure of gases in order
to condense the gases; in jet engines they keep combusted gases moving
toward the rear of the engine.

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Glossary

CRANKSHAFT A shaft having one or more cranks, usually formed as integral parts that
translates up-and-down motion into rotary motion.

CREEP To become deformed, as under continuous loads or at high temperatures.

DENSITY Mass per unit volume.

DRAG The aerodynamic force exerted on an airfoil, airplane, or other


aerodynamic body that tends to reduce its forward motion; the resistance
to moving through the air.

ENTHALPY A thermodynamic quantity equal to the internal energy of a system plus


the product of its volume and pressure; the amount of energy in a system
capable of doing mechanical work. In chemistry, the heat content of a
substance.

FATIGUE The weakening or breakdown of material subjected to stress, especially a


repeated series of stresses.

FLASH POINT The temperature at which the vapor above a liquid will ignite.

FLUOROCARBONS Hydrocarbons with fluorines attached.

FORCE An influence on a body or system that produces or tends to produce a


change in movement or in shape. A push or a pull.

FOSSIL FUEL Any combustible organic material, such as oil, coal, or natural gas, derived
from the remains of former life.

FREQUENCY The number of cycles or completed alternations per unit time of a wave or
oscillation.

GAS A substance possessing perfect molecular mobility and the property of


indefinite expansion, as opposed to a solid or liquid, and characterized by
no definite shape or volume.

GASOLINE A volatile, flammable liquid mixture of hydrocarbons, obtained from


petroleum, and used as fuel for internal combustion engines.

GEOSYNCHRONOUS Of or pertaining to a satellite traveling in an orbit 22,300 mi (35,900 km)


above the Earth’s equator: at this altitude the satellite’s period of rotation,
24 hr, matches the Earth’s, and the satellite always remains in the same
spot over the Earth.

HEAT OF FORMATION The heat evolved or absorbed during the formation of one mole of a
substance from its component elements.

HYDROCARBON Any of numerous organic compounds, such as benzene and methane, that
contain only carbon and hydrogen atoms.

IDEAL GAS A gas composed of molecules on which no forces act except upon
collision with one another and with the walls of the container in which the
gas is enclosed; a gas that obeys the ideal gas law.

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Glossary

ION An electrically charged atom or group of atoms formed by the loss or gain of
one or more electrons, such as a cation (positive ion), which is created by
electron loss and is attracted to the cathode in electrolysis, or an anion
(negative ion), which is created by an electron gain and is attracted to the
anode.

KNOCKING A pounding or clanking noise made by an engine, often as a result of


faulty fuel combustion; also called ping.

LIFT A lifting or raising force.

LIQUID Composed of molecules that move freely among themselves but do not
tend to separate like those of gases; neither gaseous nor solid, having
definite volume but not definite shape.

MACH A number indicating the ratio of the speed of an object to the speed of
sound in the medium through which the object is moving.

MASS The quantity of matter as determined from Newton’s second law of motion.

MOMENTUM A quantity expressing the motion of a body or system, equal to the prod-
uct of the mass of a body and its velocity, and for a system equal to the
vector sum of the products of mass and velocity of each particle in the system.

NOx An abbreviation for oxides of nitrogen where the “x” represents one of a
number of possible subscripts.

NOZZLE In a jet engine, a specially shaped tube sitting downstream of the power
turbine to produce thrust, to conduct the exhaust gases back to the free
stream, and to set the mass flow rate through the engine.

OCTANE RATING A designation of antiknock quality, numerically equal to the percentage of


isooctane by volume in a mixture of isooctane and normal heptane that
matches the given gasoline in antiknock characteristics.

OTTO CYCLE An idealization of the thermodynamic cycle of the internal combustion


engine with air as the working substance: intake of air at atmospheric
pressure, then adiabatic compression, then ignition with an increase of
pressure and temperature at constant volume, then adiabatic expansion
and performance of work, then a drop to atmospheric pressure at
constant volume and a rejection of heat to the environment, then the
exhaust of air at constant pressure.

OXIDATION The process of oxidizing; the addition of oxygen to a compound.

OXIDIZER A substance that oxidizes another substance, especially one that supports
the combustion of fuel; an oxidizing agent.

OZONE A form of oxygen, O3, with a peculiar odor, produced when an electric
REFERENCE

spark or ultraviolet light is passed through air or oxygen.

PLASMA A highly ionized gas containing an approximately equal number of positive


ions and electrons.

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Glossary

POLYMERS Any of numerous natural and synthetic compounds of usually high


molecular weight consisting of up to millions of repeated linked units,
each a relatively light and simple molecule.

PRESSURE Force applied uniformly over a surface, measured as force per unit of area.

SCALAR A quantity possessing only magnitude and not direction.

SOLAR CELL A photovoltaic cell that converts sunlight directly into electricity.

SOLID A substance having a definite shape and volume; one that is neither liquid
nor gaseous.

SPEED Distance traveled divided by the time of travel.

SUBSONIC A speed less than that of sound in a designated medium.

SUPERCHARGER A mechanism for forcing air into an internal-combustion engine in order to


increase engine power.

SUPERSONIC A speed greater than the speed of sound in a given medium, especially air.

TEMPERATURE A measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a sample of


matter, expressed in terms of units or degrees designated on a standard
scale.

THRUST A linear reactive force exerted by a propeller, propulsive gases, or other


means to propel an object (e.g., ship or aircraft).

TOP DEAD CENTER The point in the travel of a piston that creates the least volume in the cylinder.

TRANSONIC Relating to aerodynamic flow or flight conditions at speeds near the speed
of sound.

TURBINE Any of various machines having a rotor, usually with vanes or blades,
driven by the pressure, momentum, or reactive thrust of a moving fluid,
such as steam, water, hot gases, or air, either occurring in the form of free
jets or as a fluid passing through and entirely filling a housing around the
rotor.

TURBOCHARGER A supercharger that is driven by a turbine turned by exhaust gases from


the engine.

TURBOFAN A jet engine having a large impeller that takes in air, a small part of which
is sent through the core of the engine to combust with fuel, the remainder
being pushed back around the core to add to the thrust.

TURBOJET A jet engine having a turbine-driven compressor and developing thrust


from the exhaust of hot gases.

TURBOPROP A turbojet engine used to drive an external propeller.

VECTOR A quantity, such as velocity, completely specified by a magnitude and a


direction.

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Glossary

VELOCITY A vector quantity whose magnitude is a body’s speed and whose direction
is the body’s direction of motion.

VOLATILITY A measure of the ease of evaporation.

VOLUME The amount of space, measured in cubic units, that an object or


substance occupies.

WAVELENGTH The distance, measured in the direction of propagation of a wave,


between two successive points in the wave that are characterized by the
same phase of oscillation.

WEIGHT The force that gravitation exerts upon a body, equal to the mass of the
body times the local acceleration of gravity.

REFERENCE

Pushin g the Envelope: A N A S A G u i d e t o E n g i n e s


105 B–1226
Apr 07
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National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Glenn Research Center
21000 Brookpark Road
Cleveland, Ohio 44135
www.grc.nasa.gov
www.aeronautics.nasa.gov

www.nasa.gov

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