Fuel-rich catalytic combustion - A fuel processor for high-speed propulsion
Author(s) -
Theodore A. Brabbs,
R. J. Rollbuhler,
E. A. Lezberg
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
24th joint propulsion conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.1990-2319
Subject(s) - propulsion , combustion , automotive engineering , computer science , oxy fuel , catalysis , environmental science , nuclear engineering , process engineering , aerospace engineering , engineering , chemistry , biochemistry , organic chemistry
Fuel-rich catalytic combustion of Jet-A fuel was studied over the equivalence ratio range 4.7 to 7.8, which yielded combustion temperatures of 1250 to 1060 K. The process was soot-free and the gaseous products were similar to those obtained in the iso-octane study. A carbon atom balance across the catalyst bed calculated for the gaseous products accounted for about 70 to 90 percent of the fuel carbon; the balance was condensed as a liquid in the cold trap. It was shown that 52 to 77 percent of the fuel carbon was C1, C2, and C3 molecules. The viability of using fuel-rich catalytic combustion as a technique for preheating a practical fuel to very high temperatures was demonstrated. Preliminary results from the scaled up version of the catalytic combustor produced a high-temperature fuel containing large amounts of hydrogen and carbon monoxide. The balance of the fuel was completely vaporized and in various stages of pyrolysis and oxidation. Visual observations indicate that there was no soot present.
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