Electrically powered supersonic and hypersonic propulsor
12286942 ยท 2025-04-29
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02K7/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03H1/0081
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03H1/0093
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K7/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K7/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64G1/409
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02C6/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02K7/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64G1/40
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02C6/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K7/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K7/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K9/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A system for electromagnetically exciting certain molecules within a volume of gaseous working fluid or charge via transition frequency heating for propulsion, comprising an electrical energy source (EES), an electromagnetic wave generator (EWG), a reflection coefficient measurement device (RCMD), a controllable electrical matching network (EMN), a proportional integral derivative controller (PIDC), and a propulsor cavity (PC), wherein said PC further comprises a transmission line that comprises a waveguide and a radio frequency (RF) window, wherein said RF window provides optical access to a heating zone where the charge resides or passes through, wherein said heating zone resides in the flow path between a propulsion system's charge inlet and nozzle exhaust.
Claims
1. A system for electromagnetically exciting certain molecules within a volume of gaseous working fluid or charge via transition frequency heating for propulsion, comprising: an electrical energy source (EES); an electromagnetic wave generator (EWG); wherein said EES supplies power to said EWG; a reflection coefficient measurement device (RCMD) that is electrically coupled to said EWG; a controllable electrical matching network (EMN); a proportional integral derivative controller (PIDC); wherein said RCMD is electrically coupled to said EMN and said PIDC; wherein said PIDC is electrically coupled to said EMN; and a propulsor cavity (PC) that is electromagnetically coupled to said EMN; wherein said PC further comprises a transmission line that comprises a waveguide and a radio frequency (RF) window; wherein said RF window provides optical access to a heating zone where the charge resides or passes through; wherein said heating zone resides in the flow path between a propulsion system's charge inlet and nozzle exhaust; wherein said RCMD transmits an electromagnetic signal through said PC to and from said heating zone; wherein said heating zone further comprises the location of a final inlet shock.
2. The system as recited in claim 1, wherein reflection coefficient(s) between the EWG and the load characterized by the state of the molecules within the charge in said heating zone targeted for electromagnetic excitation is measurable by said RCMD, said RCMD being a standing-wave ratio (SWR) sensor or vector network analyzer (VNA).
3. The system as recited in claim 2, wherein said heating zone is placed between a turbojet/turboprop/turbofan engine's compressor and turbine, wherein said RF window and at least a portion of the waveguide is placed within the housing of said turbojet/turboprop/turbofan engine.
4. The system as recited in claim 2, wherein said SWR sensor comprises an RF test instrument, one or more directional couplers, antennae bridge circuits, or a combination of one or more directional couples and bridge circuits.
5. The system as recited in claim 1, wherein said EES includes one or more of the following elements comprising: a battery; a supercapacitor; a hydrogen fuel cell; and/or a turboprop gas turbine engine (GTE) powered by a combustible fuel and oxidizer; said GTE having a plurality of electric motors/generators, wherein a turbine in said GTE is electrically connected to power converters, power transmission, and power control systems.
6. The system as recited in claim 1, wherein said EWG is a gyrotron tuned to output millimeter-wave microwave energy at 60 GHz for exciting and heating the oxygen (O.sub.2) in said charge.
7. A system for electromagnetically exciting certain molecules within a volume of gaseous working fluid or charge via transition frequency heating for propulsion, comprising: an electrical energy source (EES); an electromagnetic wave generator (EWG); wherein said EES supplies power to said EWG; a reflection coefficient measurement device (RCMD) that is electrically coupled to said EWG; and a propulsor cavity (PC); wherein said PC further comprises a transmission line that comprises a waveguide and a radio frequency (RF) window; wherein said RF window provides optical access to a heating zone where the charge resides or passes through; wherein said heating zone resides in the flow path between a propulsion system's charge inlet and nozzle exhaust; wherein said RCMD transmits an electromagnetic signal through said PC to and from said heating zone; wherein said heating zone further comprises the location of a final inlet shock.
8. The system as recited in claim 7, further comprising: a controllable electrical matching network (EMN); and a proportional integral derivative controller (PIDC).
9. The system as recited in claim 8, wherein said system is configured such that: said RCMD is electrically coupled to said EMN and said PIDC; said PIDC is electrically coupled to said EMN; said EMN is electromagnetically coupled to the PC.
10. The system as recited in claim 9, wherein reflection coefficient(s) between the EWG and the load characterized by the state of the molecules within the charge in said heating zone targeted for electromagnetic excitation is measurable by said RCMD, said RCMD being a standing-wave ratio (SWR) sensor or vector network analyzer (VNA).
11. The system as recited in claim 10, wherein said SWR sensor comprises an RF test instrument, one or more directional couplers, antennae bridge circuits, or a combination of one or more directional couples and bridge circuits.
12. The system as recited in claim 7, wherein said EES includes one or more of the following elements comprising: a battery; a supercapacitor; a hydrogen fuel cell; and/or a turboprop gas turbine engine (GTE) powered by a combustible fuel and oxidizer; said GTE having a plurality of electric motors/generators, wherein a turbine in said GTE is electrically connected to power converters, power transmission, and power control systems.
13. The system as recited in claim 7, wherein said EWG is a gyrotron tuned to output millimeter-wave microwave energy at 60 GHz for exciting and heating the oxygen (O.sub.2) in said charge.
14. A method for electromagnetically exciting target molecules within the charge in said heating zone using the system as recited in claim 8, comprising: A) generating power from said EES and supplying the power to said EWG; B) generating microwave energy from said EWG and delivering said energy to said PC and charge in said heating zone.
15. The method as recited in claim 14, wherein the reflection coefficient(s) are based on a standing-wave ratio (SWR).
16. The method as recited in claim 14, wherein the reflection coefficient(s) are based on an S11 parameter, which is based on how much power of a delivered microwave signal is reflected back from said load along said transmission line.
17. The method as recited in claim 14, wherein the microwave energy from said EWG is at a frequency within the microwave spectrum of at least one gas species of said charge.
18. The method as recited in claim 14, wherein the microwave energy from said EWG is a 60 GHz millimeter-wave signal corresponding to the microwave spectrum of diatomic oxygen (O.sub.2) molecules wherein said RCMD transmits an electromagnetic signal through said PC to and from said heating zone.
19. The method as recited in claim 14, further comprising: A) calculating the reflection coefficient(s) between the EWG and the load; B) monitoring the reflection coefficient(s) using a proportional integral derivative controller (PIDC) and adjusting a controllable electrical matching network (EMN) to provide requisite heating of said charge with the minimum possible input energy.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The drawings are provided to facilitate understanding in the detailed description. It should be noted that the drawing figures may be in simplified form and might not be to precise scale. In reference to the disclosure herein, for purposes of convenience and clarity, only directional terms such as top, bottom, left, right, up, down, over, above, below, beneath, rear, front, distal, and proximal are used with respect to the accompanying drawings. Such directional terms should not be construed to limit the scope of the embodiment in any manner. System schematics are not meant to convey an accurate perspective or proportional form, but rather to illustrate the elements that are present in the system in a more visually intuitive manner than a rudimentary block diagram listing. Portions of certain figures are accompanied by icons depicting actions, processes, process states, and items. These icons are meant to efficiently convey information in an impactful and potentially more universal manner. Any ambiguity in an icon's meaning is clarified by content provided in the DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION and not be construed to limit the scope of the embodiment in any manner. Embodiments of the methods and systems represented in the drawings as block diagrams and flowcharts are illustrations of methods.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(6) I) HYPERSONIC VEHICLE 100, EPHVP 200, and SHOCK SEQUENCE 300Ref.
(7) The vehicle 100 comprises a main body 101 connected to a ducted housing 102. Since
(8) The propulsion system's charge-flow pathway begins with the freestream with neutrally charged oxygen (O.sub.2) charge flowing toward the forebody 103 or external inlet where the shock sequence to progressively reduce the flow Mach is set up. It begins with a shock 301 (shown in
(9) Downstream of the internal inlet 105, is an isolator 106 which is designed to prevent inlet unstart by providing sufficient additional adiabatic compression above its entry pressure to match the backpressure created in the heating zone 107. If the heating zone backpressure is high enough to separate the boundary layer in the isolator 106, a shock train 304 is created that leads to further pressure recovery and air temperature increase. Preferably, the maximum heating zone entrance air temperature is no more than an approximate range of 2600-3000 R or 1440-1670 K, to prevent disassociation of pre-heating zone air. The disassociation of air is an endothermic process, which reduces the temperature and sets up a condition for non-equilibrium expansion losses. This is because the energy locked up in the disassociation process cannot keep up with the rapid gas dynamic expansion and be converted back to the charge's molecular kinetic energy, resulting in a thrust loss.
(10) The flow speed that enters the heating zone 107 is also based on internal aerothermal-structural limitations as well as the requirement for sufficient time for the O.sub.2 to be heated to the level required for the sought-after delivered thrust. For example, in the hypersonic flight regime, the shock system 302-305 may be designed to successively slow the internal flow entering the heating zone 107 to no less than the supersonic regime in order to temper thermal loading and management issues. After the O.sub.2 molecules are heated and pressure is increased, the charge is expanded and accelerated through an internal diverging nozzle 108 and, for certain vehicle embodiments, an aftbody-bounded external nozzle 109 for semi-unbounded expansion, where thrust to sustain supersonic and hypersonic vehicle flight is generated.
(11) II) EPHVP SYSTEM AND METHOD (200) OVERVIEWRef.
(12) Reflection coefficient(s) can be based on a standing-wave ratio (SWR) or alternatively the voltage SWR (VSWR). In this instance or embodiment, the RCMD 203 would be a standing-wave ratio (SWR) sensor. SWR sensors are well-known in the art of electrical power systems design. The SWR sensor 203 as implemented in the EPHVP 200 system comprises an RF test instrument such as a vector network analyzer (VNA), one or more directional couplers, antennae bridge circuits, or a combination of one or more directional couples and bridge circuits, etc.
(13) The SWR is the ratio of the forward-to-reflected voltage or the maximum voltage divided by the minimum voltage on the transmission line. The SWR sensor 203 measures how closely or how poorly the impedance of a load matches the characteristic impedance of a transmission line or waveguide. Standing waves along a transmission line are caused by these impedance mismatches.
(14) Alternatively, the reflection coefficient(s) may be derived from the measurement of an S11 parameter, which gauges the efficiency of RF power transmission by quantifying how much power of an incident wave or delivered microwave signal is reflected back along the transmission line from a load. In this embodiment, the RCMD 203 measuring this parameter may be a VNA, and the S11 parameter is a complex number that describes both the magnitude and the phase shift of the reflection.
(15) A controllable electrical matching network (EMN) 204 facilitates the efficient delivery of energy to the propulsor cavity (PC). The PC comprises a waveguide 205 to direct the microwave energy and a radio frequency (RF) window 207 to provide both optical access to the heating zone 107 and protective isolation of the system components from the charge and other external elements. A preferred embodiment of the EPHVP is such that the field intensity is high at the final inlet shock 305 since that area would likely be a higher concentration of the O.sub.2 species due to pressure, as shown in
(16) A proportional integral derivative controller (PIDC) 206 is employed to continuously monitor the reflection coefficient(s) provided by said RCMD 203. The PIDC 206 then controls how the EMN 204 can adjust the forward signal to achieve the requisite active charge heating most efficiently. Active charge heating is accomplished by electromagnetically exciting the target molecules within the propulsor's charge flow in the heating zone 107.
(17) To summarize the relation of components in
(18) III) SUPERSONIC PROPULSION SYSTEM 400. EPHVP 200, and SHOCK SEQUENCE 501, 502Ref.
(19) This supersonic propulsion system 400 comprises an inlet section 401, a subsonic diffuser 402, a heating zone 107, and a converging-diverging exhaust nozzle 404. The inlet geometry comprises an inlet spike 405 located along the engine's 400 axis that starts some distance upstream from the engine 400. The radial extent of the inlet spike 405 is less than the inner radius of the engine's annular wall 406 and is shaped such that the incoming supersonic air travels through a converging section and experiences a series of oblique shocks 501, a geometric throat where there is a terminal normal shock 502, and the subsonic diffuser 402 where the transition to subsonic charge air speeds occurs.
(20) The EPHVP 200 has optical access to the heating zone 107 where the O.sub.2 molecules are electromagnetically excited and the charge air pressure is increased before the air enters the converging-diverging exhaust nozzle 404 defined by the shape of the engine's annular walls 407 near the downstream end of the engine 400; at the exhaust nozzle, the flow is reaccelerated from subsonic to supersonic flow, and since energy was added to the charge, the result is higher exit velocities than the inlet capture velocities and a positive net thrust.
(21) IV) EPHVP SYSTEM AND METHOD 200 FOR A VEHICLE CAPABLE OF FLYING IN BOTH THE SUPERSONIC AND HYPERSONIC REGIMESRef.
(22) V) EES 201Ref.
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(24) The entrance to the inlet assembly may include a hinged inlet door that can be in an opened 801 position during GTE operation or closed position 802 when the GTE is not operating. The low-speed inlet assembly 801-803 can be variable as a function of the inlet capture flow rate so that the proper amount is directed or throttled to the GTE 804. Excess air flowing through this inlet assembly 801-803 may be bled off or bypassed. A portion of the captured freestream air is admitted through the HES 800 when the door is open 801 at a subsonic or supersonic Mach number. If the flow is supersonic at the inlet door 801, the air is slowed down by a shock 701 that forms off the leading edge of the door 801. This shock alternates to expansion waves and back to a compression wave with each successive wall reflection along the HES's inlet manifold 803. The GTE 804 ingests subsonic air at its upstream portion where the inlet manifold 803 ends. An embodiment of the GTE system 800 would have a door or valve that could be open 806 or if not operating, closed 807.
(25) The electrical power generation process is well recognized to those familiar with GTEs 804, where an incoming airstream is compressed and mixed with a chemical fuel before being ignited, burned, and expanded through a turbine that provides shaft power to the compressor and generator before being scavenged. Supporting sub-systems for the GTE 804 further comprises one or more liquid fuel tanks, one or more fuel pumps, one or more feed fuel rails, fuel injectors targeting its spray into the combustion chamber, one or more fuel return lines if the system is the type that returns excess fuel back to the fuel reservoir and an electronic control system that meters the appropriate amount of fuel injected. Mega-watt (MW) and kilovolt (kV) in-flight power generation hybrid electric systems are described in the article by Norris [3]. Embodiments of the GTE system 800 can provide more than power generation, but also supplement thrust for certain operational regimes. The GTE-generated power can be delivered by electrical connection to a battery system to store energy, and/or supercapacitors for short-term high storage with high charge/discharge rate capacity, and/or directly to the rest of the propulsor system 202-207 and heating zone 107 in the same manner as described before in Section II of this disclosure.
(26) For shorter flights or single-use (e.g., missile) applications, an embodiment of the EES 201 may exclude a power generation system and more simply comprise a charged battery with sufficiently high energy density per unit mass and total energy storage capacity to sustain the operation of the rest of the EPHVP and thus flight throughout the intended trajectory. Other alternative embodiments of the EES 201 may be a fuel cell comprising an anode, cathode, and proton exchange membrane to support hydrogen-oxygen redox reactions to charge batteries of sufficiently high energy density per unit mass, charging rate accommodation, and storage capacity. Hydrogen may be sourced from a high-pressure storage tank or from a hydrocarbon fuel with an onboard reformer that separates the hydrogen atoms from carbon atoms.
(27) The preferred capacity embodiment of the EES 201 to support sufficiently high working fluid temperature and pressure increase at the high charge flow rate and short heating zone residence times is high enough that after all power dissipation through the electrical circuit componentry and EPHVP system components 201-207, the delivered microwave power to the O.sub.2 molecules is as high as 1 megawatt (MW). A publication on combustion-based hypersonic scramjet inlets by Smart [4] provides a design calculation example that can be applied to the EPHVP system, where the captured inlet air mass flow rate without spillage is {dot over (m)}.sub.air=0.5 kg/s. Equation 1 provides a dimensionally consistent relation of the microwave medium (i.e., charge) temperature increase as a function of the inlet air mass flow rate ({dot over (m)}.sub.air), specific heat at constant volume (C.sub.v), and delivered microwave power (P.sub.delivered).
(28)
(29) In combustion-based scramjet, the temperature in the combustor (a.k.a., heating zone 107) is between 2000-3000 K [5]. To illustrate the realizability of the present invention's ability to provide alternative requisite heating in one hypersonic operating condition, assume C.sub.v=767 J/kg.Math.K. With 1.0e+06 Watts (Joules/second) and 0.5 kg/sec. mass air flow rate, the microwave energy would heat up the charge air by +2608 K and is comparable to the temperature end-state after combustion.
(30) If one reasonably assumes a 30 km flight altitude of the hypersonic vehicle at one point in its trajectory, the ambient air temperature before inlet shock compression is approximately 226 K, based on U.S. Standard Atmosphere 1976 Revised data. After inlet shock compression, the charge air temperature entering the heating zone would be even higher.
(31) It is important to note that the 60 GHz microwave energy only acts to heat the O.sub.2 molecules. Air, however, is typically composed of a plurality of atomic and molecular elements including O.sub.2, nitrogen (N.sub.2), water (H.sub.2O), and other species. At 30 km altitude, the mass fraction of O.sub.2 in the air is on the order of 0.10. This does not mean that Eqn. 1's denominator {dot over (m)}.sub.air should be changed to {dot over (m)}.sub.O2 and the temperature increase multiplied by a factor of 10. Given that 0.1 is a substantial mass fraction for O.sub.2 in air and O.sub.2 is homogenously distributed in air, any heating to the O.sub.2 molecules will be immediately absorbed by the entire charge air. Hence, Eqn. 1's tabulation of the entire charge, {dot over (m)}.sub.air, is proper.
(32) Like combustion-based supersonic and hypersonic combustors, radiative and convective heat transfer losses will reduce the temperature of the charge. However, this section shows that current power generation and delivery technology can support the operation of the EPHVP for hypersonic flight. The demands of supersonic flight are expected to be less than hypersonic flight thanks to the increased residence time in the heating zone 107 if the engine is a dual supersonic-hypersonic capable with a constant streamwise extent of the heating zone 107.
(33) VI) EPHVP SYSTEM 200 AND METHOD FOR A VEHICLE CAPABLE OF FLYING IN SUBSONIC, SUPERSONIC, AND HYPERSONIC REGIMESRef.
(34) VII) EWG 202 AND RF TRANSMISSIONRef.
(35) VIII) OTHER ALTERNATIVE EMBODIMENTSRef.
(36) The depicted embodiments of this disclosure are an airframe underbody integrated duct. However, the EPHVP 200 can also be part of a podded propulsion system, where there is a plurality of propulsion inlets, isolators, heating zones, and nozzles overall. On such implementations, embodiments may include a single, centralized EES 201 but with individual EPHVP components 202-207 for each individual engine.
(37) Furthermore, the heating zone 107 of said EPHVP 200 may be in turbojet, turboprop, and turbofan engines for propulsion duty (not shown). With this embodiment, instead of a combustion chamber, a heating zone 107 is placed between a turbojet/turboprop/turbofan engine's compressor and turbine. The RF window 207 and at least a portion of the waveguide 205 is placed within the housing of said turbojet/turboprop/turbofan engine.
(38) The depicted embodiments show an optical access RF window 207 on one side of the heating zone 107. Alternative embodiments of the EPHVP 200 can be arranged such that the RF waves emanate from multiple directions such as from the side walls of the high-speed duct.
(39) The present invention may be generally directed to any system that ingests relatively lower enthalpy oxygen to be eventually converted into a higher enthalpy exhaust charge. Example applications can be a leaf blower, air jet boat, etc. The power requirements and other system capacity sizing would be appropriately scaled to the application of interest.
(40) Many alterations and modifications may be made by those having ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the embodiment. Therefore, it must be understood that the illustrated embodiment has been set forth only for the purposes of example and that it should not be taken as limiting the embodiment as defined by the following claims. For example, notwithstanding the fact that the elements of a claim are set forth below in a certain combination, it must be expressly understood that the embodiment includes other combinations of fewer, more, or different elements, which are disclosed herein even when not initially claimed in such combinations.
REFERENCES
(41) 1. Yoder et al., Modeling of Turbulent Free Shear Flows, NASA Technical Report NASA/TM, 2013-218072, 2013. 2. Bonanos et al., Observations on a Supersonic Shear Layer, 47th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting Including The New Horizons Forum and Aerospace Exposition, 2012. 3. Norris, Guy. GE Claims World First with High-Voltage High-Altitude Power Demo. Aviation Week Network, 19 2022, https://aviationweek.com/shownews/farnborough-airshow/ge-claims-world-first-high-voltage-high-altitude-power-demo. 4. Smart, Michael K., Scramjet Inlets, R&T Organization, RTO-EN-AVT-185, NATO/OTAN, 2013. 5. Nelson, H. F., Radiative Heating in Scramjet Combustors, Journal of Thermophysics and Heat Transfer, Vol. 11, No. 1, January-March 1997.