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Problem #1

This document contains 5 questions regarding gas dynamics and compressible flow: 1. Draw a T-S diagram for adiabatic flow with friction in a constant pipe with M=3.0 and γ=1.4. 2. Calculate the Mach number for 3 flight conditions using Pitot-static measurements. 3. Calculate the heat addition and exit conditions to choke flow at M=2.0 and M=0.2 in a heated duct. 4. Calculate the inlet Mach number above which flow will be unchoked in a SCRAMjet combustor. 5. Calculate the maximum length of a connecting pipe between a high pressure air bottle farm and wind tunnel

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
85 views

Problem #1

This document contains 5 questions regarding gas dynamics and compressible flow: 1. Draw a T-S diagram for adiabatic flow with friction in a constant pipe with M=3.0 and γ=1.4. 2. Calculate the Mach number for 3 flight conditions using Pitot-static measurements. 3. Calculate the heat addition and exit conditions to choke flow at M=2.0 and M=0.2 in a heated duct. 4. Calculate the inlet Mach number above which flow will be unchoked in a SCRAMjet combustor. 5. Calculate the maximum length of a connecting pipe between a high pressure air bottle farm and wind tunnel

Uploaded by

T.r.Prasanna
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Report #1

1. Draw the 𝑇 − 𝑆 diagram for the adiabatic flow of a gas with 𝛾 = 1.4 in a constant-diameter
pipe with friction. The reference Mach number 𝑀 for the flow is 3.0.

2. Consider a Pitot static tube mounted on the nose of an experimental airplane. A Pitot
tube measures the total pressure at the tip of the probe (hence sometimes called the
Pitot pressure), and a Pitot static tube combines this with a simultaneous measurement of
the free-stream static pressure. The Pitot and free-stream static measurements are given
below for three different flight conditions. Calculate the free-stream Mach number at
which the airplane is flying for each of the three different conditions:
a. Pitot pressure =1.22 × 10 𝑁 𝑚 , static pressure =1.01 × 10 𝑁 𝑚
b. Pitot pressure =7222 𝑙𝑏 𝑓𝑡 7222 lb/ft2, static pressure =2116 𝑙𝑏 𝑓𝑡
c. Pitot pressure =13107 𝑙𝑏 𝑓𝑡, static pressure =1020 𝑙𝑏 𝑓𝑡
3. Consider air entering a heated duct at 𝑝 = 1 𝑎𝑡𝑚 and 𝑇 = 288𝐾. Ignore the effect of
friction. Calculate the amount of heat per unit mass (in joules per kilogram) necessary to
choke the flow at the exit of the duct, as well as the pressure and temperature at the
duct exit, for an inlet Mach number of (a) 𝑀 = 2.0 (b) 𝑀 = 0.2.
3. At the inlet to the combustor of a supersonic combustion ramjet (SCRAMjet), the flow
Mach number is supersonic. For a fuel-air ratio (by mass) of 0.03 and a combustor exit
temperature of 4800 𝑅, calculate the inlet Mach number above which the flow will be
unchoked. Assume one-dimensional frictionless flow with 𝛾 = 1.4, with the heat release
per slug of fuel equal to 4.5 × 10 𝑓𝑡 ∙ 𝑙𝑏.
3. The stagnation chamber of a wind tunnel is connected to a high-pressure air bottle farm
which is outside the laboratory building. The two are connected by a long pipe of 4-in
inside diameter. If the static pressure ratio between the bottle farm and the stagnation
chamber is 10, and the bottle-farm static pressure is 100 atm, how long can the pipe be
without choking? Assume adiabatic, subsonic, one-dimensional flow with a friction
coefficient of 0.005.

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