Aerospace Lovers (Mr. A particularly): British company claims biggest engine advance since the jet!

Jun 9, 2004
13,753
1
Canada
#1
British company claims biggest engine advance since the jet




A Skylon in flight with a cutaway of the SABRE engine, in an illustration courtesy of Reaction Images Ltd. A small British company with a dream of building a re-usable space plane has won an important endorsement from the European Space Agency after completing key tests on its novel engine technology.
Credit: Reuters/Handout


By Chris Wickham
Wed Nov 28, 2012
Reuters


LONDON (Reuters) - A small British company with a dream of building a re-usable space plane has won an important endorsement from the European Space Agency (ESA) after completing key tests on its novel engine technology. Reaction Engines Ltd believes its Sabre engine, which would operate like a jet engine in the atmosphere and a rocket in space, could displace rockets for space access and transform air travel by bringing any destination on Earth to no more than four hours away. That ambition was given a boost on Wednesday by ESA, which has acted as an independent auditor on the Sabre test programme.

"ESA are satisfied that the tests demonstrate the technology required for the Sabre engine development," the agency's head of propulsion engineering Mark Ford told a news conference. "One of the major obstacles to a re-usable vehicle has been removed," he said. "The gateway is now open to move beyond the jet age." The space plane, dubbed Skylon, only exists on paper. What the company has right now is a remarkable heat exchanger that is able to cool air sucked into the engine at high speed from 1,000 degrees Celsius to minus 150 degrees in one hundredth of a second. This core piece of technology solves one of the constraints that limit jet engines to a top speed of about 2.5 times the speed of sound, which Reaction Engines believes it could double.

SHROUDED IN SECRECY

With the Sabre engine in jet mode, the air has to be compressed before being injected into the engine's combustion chambers. Without pre-cooling, the heat generated by compression would make the air hot enough to melt the engine. The challenge for the engineers was to find a way to cool the air quickly without frost forming on the heat exchanger, which would clog it up and stop it working. Using a nest of fine pipes that resemble a large wire coil, the engineers have managed to get round this fatal problem that would normally follow from such rapid cooling of the moisture in atmospheric air.

They are tight-lipped on exactly how they managed to do it. "We are not going to tell you how this works," said the company's chief designer Richard Varvill, who started his career at the military engine division of Rolls-Royce. "It is our most closely guarded secret." The company has deliberately avoided filing patents on its heat exchanger technology to avoid details of how it works - particularly the method for preventing the build-up of frost - becoming public. The Sabre engine could take a plane to five times the speed of sound and an altitude of 25 km, about 20 percent of the speed and altitude needed to reach orbit. For space access, the engines would then switch to rocket mode to do the remaining 80 percent.

IT COULD EVEN MAKE THE TEA

Reaction Engines believes Sabre is the only engine of its kind in development and the company now needs to raise about 250 million pounds ($400 million) to fund the next three-year development phase in which it plans to build a small-scale version of the complete engine. Chief executive Tim Hayter believes the company could have an operational engine ready for sale within 10 years if it can raise the development funding. The company reckons the engine technology could win a healthy chunk of four key markets together worth $112 billion (69 billion pounds) a year, including space access, hypersonic air travel, and modified jet engines that use the heat exchanger to save fuel. The fourth market is unrelated to aerospace. Reaction Engines believes the technology could also be used to raise the efficiency of so-called multistage flash desalination plants by 15 percent. These plants, largely in the Middle East, use heat exchangers to distil water by flash heating sea water into steam in multiple stages.

The firm has so far received 90 percent of its funding from private sources, mainly rich individuals including chairman Nigel McNair Scott, the former mining industry executive who also chairs property developer Helical Bar. Chief executive Tim Hayter told Reuters he would welcome government investment in the company, mainly because of the credibility that would add to the project. But the focus will be on raising the majority of the 250 million pounds it needs now from a mix of institutional investors, high net worth individuals and possibly potential partners in the aerospace industry.

STANDING START

Sabre produces thrust by burning hydrogen and oxygen, but inside the atmosphere it would take that oxygen from the air, reducing the amount it would have to carry in fuel tanks for rocket mode, cutting weight and allowing Skylon to go into orbit in one stage. Scramjets on test vehicles like the U.S. Air Force Waverider also use atmospheric air to create thrust but they have to be accelerated to their operating speed by normal jet engines or rockets before they kick in. The Sabre engine can operate from a standing start.

If the developers are successful, Sabre would be the first engine in history to send a vehicle into space without using disposable, multi-stage rockets. Skylon is years away, but in the meantime the technology is attracting interest from the global aerospace industry and governments because it effectively doubles the technical limits of current jet engines and could cut the cost of space access. The heat exchanger technology could also be incorporated into a new jet engine design that could cut 5 to 10 percent - or $10 (6.25 pounds)-20 billion - off airline fuel bills. That would be significant in an industry where incremental efficiency gains of one percent or so, from improvements in wing design for instance, are big news.
 
Oct 18, 2002
12,085
17
here
www.apfn.org
#5
thanks for the post!
these people hide the real stuff. the engines which work with super high voltage electricity, defy gravity, bend space and make no noise at all (only an initial hissing sound when fired up).
it is true and there are video evidence that such crafts exist. They are sometimes called as city in the sky , or eyewitnesses say some of them are many football field long etc etc.
one flew over Chicago a few years ago in early morning hours where many police officers saw it in different locations....

The way these crafts work is that they generate a very high amount of voltage via an anti-matter reactor which was stolen from crashed ufo back in Roswell in 1947. They have had many decades to work on and back-engineer to figure how those saucers work so I am sure they do exist. Among credible witnesses there are police officers, scientists who worked on project but broke their silence, astronauts, head of NATO forces, pilots (both military and civilian aircraft), secretary of States during Eisenhower admin. etc, etc....
so not all of these ppl lie, the famous astronaut (whose name I just forgot since I am not into ufos any more lol) even wrote a letter to UN asking them to investigate the phenomenon but nothing was ever done about the issue.

You may find it interesting that things related to UFOs hold highest security clearance ever, even higher than national security matters or nuclear related subjects.
but the govt, compartmentalize everything so the left hand does not know what the right hand is doing...like you can be an engineer working on a power supply an your friend is another engineer who is working on the reactor. You cannot communicate to each other even at home, even if you do you wont know what to talk about...

So the moral of the story is that we are stuck with the old out-dated crappy rocket or jet or propellant kind of engines which pollute the air, are dangerous and not very efficient or reliable!
huh!
 

R.BAGGIO

National Team Player
Oct 19, 2002
5,702
0
Toronto
#6
It's interesting but I guess all the details are secret so don't know what to believe really. I'd really like to know how they managed to achieve the cooling rate that is mentioned.

"ESA are satisfied that the tests demonstrate the technology required for the Sabre engine development," the agency's head of propulsion engineering Mark Ford told a news conference. "One of the major obstacles to a re-usable vehicle has been removed," he said. "The gateway is now open to move beyond the jet age." The space plane, dubbed Skylon, only exists on paper. What the company has right now is a remarkable heat exchanger that is able to cool air sucked into the engine at high speed from 1,000 degrees Celsius to minus 150 degrees in one hundredth of a second. This core piece of technology solves one of the constraints that limit jet engines to a top speed of about 2.5 times the speed of sound, which Reaction Engines believes it could double.
 

alila

National Team Player
Jun 9, 2006
5,456
0
a galaxy far far away
#7
Somewhere out there,Aliens are laughing their ass off when they see we on watch have achieved sth that is so out-aged in the galaxy

The whole US and Russia exploration in ballistic missiles and stealth technology is what they hijacked from German scientist and the rest is what they did by reverse engineering from UFOs

They faked landing on the moon and many other backward shows to mislead ppl
 
Aug 27, 2005
8,688
0
Band e 209
#8
Mr. G

If such a complex engine is going to become a reality it has got to be built by Brits. They are and have always been among the frontline internal combustion engines manufacturers of the world.

US aviation communities always brag about the outstanding performance of P-51 Mustang but most of the time onlookers forget about the formidable Merlin V-12 engine mounted on the Mustang’s nose. Without that Motor Mustang would be another halfway decent WWII fighter.

When I’m traveling with jet liners it feel comforting when I see that “RR” emblem on the engine nacelles. If all of the Jet-Liners and small private jets don’t mount Rolls Royce engines on their plane is because R.R is not able to keep up with world wide demand.

The main obstacle regarding speed improvement on jet engines is the inlet air speed entering into the engine. If the inlet air enter the engine faster than speed of sound the compressor will stall as soon as it hits the 1[SUP]st[/SUP] stage on the Stators and Rotors, that is why the design of engine inlet in supersonic airplanes are so critical. When the plane is traveling faster than speed of sound the inlet must receive the incoming air and reduce its speed to subsonic before it hits the first stage on the compressor. This has always been the reason no has been able to built a plane able to faster than Mach3 (Mig-25 and Sr-71)

When jet engine inlets reduce the speed of incoming air to subsonic tremendous amount of heat will be generated, depending on Mach # some time up to over 1500 F, this the heat the article you posted is talking about. It must be cooled in order to make it useable for the compressor and the combustion chamber.

I did some googling about Saber engine and found a cutaway view of it, and looking at it makes it obvious what they are doing (to some degree of course not the detail).
They are using a multi-Layer variable inlet Cones with the staggered Heat Exchanger right behind them. They need to have liquid Oxygen and liquid Hydrogen to be used as primary fuel when the engine is operating in rocket mode, as you know liquid Hydrogen is very cold and they can recirculate it through the Heat Exchanger to cool down the incoming air, or they use separate liquid Helium for this purpose which is not combustible and reduces the fire hazard.

All in all it will be a highly complex engine with plenty of early design gremlins need to be sorted out before entering the production. There some very interesting Saber engine related videos in U-tube you might want to check them out.
 

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Jun 9, 2004
13,753
1
Canada
#9
Always a pleasure to read your technical input Mr. A :)
The part I can't really wrap my head around is how they're going to contain a fluid near absolute zero coming into contact with a gas at 1000 K - I'd like to use shatter, but any pipe or shell holding that liquid would just explode, no? Or is it because they're doing it in four stages, the temperature differential for each stage is only 250 K which I guess is very manageable? But in the cut-away it looks like they're just injecting the liquid gas into the 1st stage.
 
Aug 27, 2005
8,688
0
Band e 209
#10
Always a pleasure to read your technical input Mr. A :)
The part I can't really wrap my head around is how they're going to contain a fluid near absolute zero coming into contact with a gas at 1000 K - I'd like to use shatter, but any pipe or shell holding that liquid would just explode, no? Or is it because they're doing it in four stages, the temperature differential for each stage is only 250 K which I guess is very manageable? But in the cut-away it looks like they're just injecting the liquid gas into the 1st stage.
Mr, G.
Than you. Same here as always.

I don't believe -150 deg C liquid (i.e pressurized gas) will be in direct contact with the incoming air, If you look at the 4 stage heat exchanger (4 tubular shiny cylinders located right behind the staggered nose Cone)) will act just like a radiator (very simplistic term) liquid Hydrogen or possible Helium will circulate inside while incoming hot air will pass through the cores of H.exchanger outside without coming into direct contact.

Most of the tubes and piping you see are mostly for the Rocket portion of the engine, the compressor is located right in the middle (the funnel shape graphite color cone with the convergent side facing front cones, right after shiny heat exchangers). As they claim in the article this compressor is dual purpose, it provide compressed air to combustion chambers when the engine is operating at turbo-jet mode and also provides Copm. air when the engine will act as a Rocket.

Also interesting part is the physical shape of the Heat exchanger itself, Divergent up front and Convergent right before the Compressor enterance. Diameter of the rear portion is almost 2wice as the front. This will reduce entering air velocity to great degree.