A Study of High Temperature Fuels and Lubricants on Supersonic Aircraft/Engine System Performance 740473
An evaluation of the influence of two classes of fuels and four types of lubricants on supersonic military interceptor aircraft performance at the airframe subsystem and engine component level is presented. Engine cycles representative of anticipated technology levels in the 1980 time period are analyzed to determine interceptor performance as a function of fuel and lubricant properties and temperature limitations. The relative allotment of available fuel heat sink between engine and airframe is also investigated to determine the primary factors affected by fuel interface temperature and to provide meaningful design guidance for future system applications. The results indicate that with an integrated systems approach to the management of the aircraft and engine system heat loads, JP type fuels and type 2 (MIL-L-27502) lubricants will meet the minimum requirements for advanced military systems. The use of a fuel with JP-7 thermal stability can provide a significant effect on engine performance. Above a minimum level, however, bulk oil temperature has only secondary influence on aircraft performance.
Citation: Russell, T. and Mattes, R., "A Study of High Temperature Fuels and Lubricants on Supersonic Aircraft/Engine System Performance," SAE Technical Paper 740473, 1974, https://doi.org/10.4271/740473. Download Citation
Author(s):
T. E. Russell, R. E. Mattes
Pages: 10
Event:
National Air Transportation Meeting
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
SAE 1974 Transactions-V83-A
Related Topics:
Hypersonic and supersonic aircraft
Engine components
Aircraft
Lubricants
Airframes
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