pulse jet engine

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Project Pulse-Jet Group 4 Jeffrey Dennen Justin Marriott Brian Melo Matthew Skillin

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Design and Fabrication of pulse jet engine.

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Page 1: Pulse Jet Engine

Project Pulse-Jet Group 4

Jeffrey DennenJustin Marriott

Brian MeloMatthew Skillin

Page 2: Pulse Jet Engine

What is Project Pulse–Jet? ▫Project Pulse – Jet

is an analytical study of how a pulse-jet engine works.

▫Our Goals To design, build and test a pulse-jet engine.

▫Plan of Action Research and design a prototype of a pulse-jet engine. Build the prototype based on our design. Test the prototype against the theoretical analysis.

Page 3: Pulse Jet Engine

History of the pulsejet• The pulsejet engine was first invented in the early 1900 by a Swedish

inventor Martin Wiberg

• Paul Schmidt, who engineered the first production pulsejet during the Second World War with his flying bomb, the Argus V1. ▫ Nicknamed the “buzz” bomb because of the low hum it admitted during flight.▫ Used by the Germans to bomb London from 1944-1945▫ Over 9,000 V-1 were fired on England during WW2

• The pulsejet took a backseat in the engineering world when the turbofan jet engine was invented

• Has returned to the engineering scene as of late because of the interest in Pulse Detonation Engines (PDE).

Page 4: Pulse Jet Engine

How does it work? • A pulsejet engine is a very simple jet engine consisting of

very little to no moving parts. The combustion cycle comprises five or six phases: Induction, Compression, (in some engines) Fuel Injection, Ignition, Combustion, and Exhaust.

• The rapidly expanding gasses exit out of the engine and as this happens a vacuum is created in the combustion chamber which pulls in a fresh new air charge fro m the atmosphere, and then the whole cycle repeats itself.

Page 5: Pulse Jet Engine

Combustion Cycle

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Types of Pulse Jets• There are two basic types of pulsejets.

▫ valve or traditional pulsejet ▫ valve-less pulsejet.

• The Argus V1 Schmidt was a valve pulsejet

• Most of the development work for the valve-less engines are done by two American engineers Lockwood and Hiller.

• Types of Valves▫ Petal▫ High Efficiency Petal▫ Valve Grid

Page 8: Pulse Jet Engine

Design Research• The Lenoir cycle is an idealized

thermodynamic cycle often used to model a pulse-jet engine.

• Comprises of 3 cycles:▫ Heat added at constant volume.▫ Adiabatic Expansion.▫ Exhaust of the hot gasses at a

constant pressure.• Thrust can be directly calibrated on

the basis that the cycle is completed over two

working strokes.

Page 9: Pulse Jet Engine

Design Research• C.E. Tharratt

▫Discovered a surprising result that the ratio of duct volume to effective length had a linear relationship to the maximum static thrust or: V/L = 0.00316F

▫This relationship has been compared to all known pulse-jets from the large V-1 “flying bomb” of over 500 lb. thrust to the miniature Dyna-jets of 4-5 lbs. thrust.

Thrust = 2.2 x Cross-Sectional area or F = 2.2A

Page 10: Pulse Jet Engine

Sample Calculations• .

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Pulse-Jet Body Design

Page 12: Pulse Jet Engine

Pulse-Jet Body Exploded

Combustion Chamber

Taper

Exhaust Pipe

Page 13: Pulse Jet Engine

Valveless

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Petal Valve

Page 15: Pulse Jet Engine

Valve Grid

Page 16: Pulse Jet Engine

Design Matrix for valves • Ranked on a 1 to 10 scale (1 being the worst

and 10 being the best)COST EFFICIENCY

MACHINABILITY

FUNCTIONALITY

WEIGHT AESTETICS TOTALS

Valve-less 10 5 10 10 10 4 39

Petal Valve 5 6 8 6 6 9 40

High Efficiency Petal Valve

5 8 6 8 6 9 42

Valve grid 2 10 4 4 4 7 31

Page 17: Pulse Jet Engine

Valve Design•Sample Calculation.

▫Valve area = (0.23 x mean cross-sectional area) / 0.6 assuming the valves are going to be 60% efficient. 

▫Valve Area = (0.23 x 7.72)/0.6 = 2.96 in

Page 18: Pulse Jet Engine

Valve Design

Page 19: Pulse Jet Engine

Valve Component Explode

Valve Body

Diffuser

Reed Valve

Page 20: Pulse Jet Engine

Final Design

Page 21: Pulse Jet Engine

Final Design Exploded

Valve Assembly

Body Assembly

Page 22: Pulse Jet Engine

Building and Testing• Materials

▫Pulse-Jets Main body. Rolled and seem welded using 0.063” Stainless

Steel Sheet Metal. Stainless Selected because of its higher resistance

to heat then mild steel.▫Valve Body

CNC machined (Mill and Lathe) from 6061 Aluminum. Aluminum used for its light weight and its

machinability. ▫Reed Valve

0.006” Spring Steel.  low alloy, medium carbon steel or high carbon

steel with a very high yield strength. This allows objects made of spring steel to return to their original shape despite significant bending or twisting.

Page 23: Pulse Jet Engine

Combustion Chamber Drawing

Page 24: Pulse Jet Engine

Benchman Verification

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Fuel and Fuel Delivery•Fuel

▫Propane Easily obtained. Boiling Point below room temperature. Being a gas allows for easier starting.

•Fuel Delivery System▫Propane Tank▫Propane lines▫Gas Fitting Nozzle▫Needle Valve

Page 32: Pulse Jet Engine

Testing•Prototype will be tested to verify thrust

output.

•Test Stand will be constructed to secure Pulse-Jet safely.

•Digital scale will be attached to frame to calculate thrust

Page 33: Pulse Jet Engine

Budget •Stainless steel sheet metal, with labor:

$150•Valve Body: $0 on hand•Reed Valves with machining labor: $25•Propane Tank: $0, on hand•Fuel Delivery System: $0 on hand•Instrumentation: $0 on hand•Test stand material: $0 on hand•Fuel: $50• •Total: $175

Page 34: Pulse Jet Engine

Project’s Future •Continue testing on prototype to gain

further knowledge of its operating cycle.

•Construct larger Jet using the knowledge gained from this smaller prototype.

•Use larger engine to power to propel a manned vehicle.

Page 35: Pulse Jet Engine

Thank You•Group 4 would like to thank

Professor Roberts Professor Rourke Mechanology Inc. (Attleboro, MA) Wayne’s Sheet Metal Paul’s Custom Exhaust Project’s Lab Staff Machine Shop Staff

Page 36: Pulse Jet Engine

Bibliography •Simpson Bruce “The Enthusiasts'

Guide to Pulsejet Engines”•http://www.aardvark.co.nz/pjet/•http://www.zachmiers.com/

pulsejetbook/•http://www.pulse-jets.com/•Roy, Gabriel “Combustion

processes in propulsion control, noise, and pulse detonation”

Page 37: Pulse Jet Engine

Questions?