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Science Technology

Pulse Detonation Engines: The Future of Aviation 354

noah_fense writes "Popular Science is running an interesting article about the race to replace the jet turbine with a more efficient source of Mach-breaking airpower: the pulse-detonation engine. It works by detonating (instead of slow burning) fuel hundreds to thousands of times a second. PDE technology is poised to make supersonic passenger flights and space travel affordable. 'Pulse detonation is a hot topic in combustion research,' says Gabriel Roy of the Office of Naval Research. 'Compared with gas turbines, the PDE has a much simpler configuration. It has the capability of going from subsonic to supersonic using less fuel, and it's thermodynamically more efficient. But there are big engineering issues--thermal fatigue, noise. It's very challenging research.'"
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Pulse Detonation Engines: The Future of Aviation

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  • Aurora? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 14, 2003 @09:50PM (#6702347)
    Isn't this what the black helicopter people say the Aurora (fabled SR71 replacement) uses?
    • Re:Aurora? (Score:5, Informative)

      by BJZQ8 ( 644168 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @11:16PM (#6702833) Homepage Journal
      The PDWE has been rumored for years to be the propulsion for the fabled Aurora...this type of engine leaves "donuts on a rope" contrails behind the aircraft. The PDWE is so much different from any other engine that it's silly...First, there are few, if any, moving parts. Fuel is injected, and causes a traveling wave of combustion to move down a tube...which is reflected inside the engine, and comes back up the tube. This wave compresses fuel and air still being injected and inhaled, enough so that it detonates, instead of combusting...think of it as the "pinging" in your car engine when you have crappy fuel. But harnesses correctly (as in a diesel engine,) it's actually more efficient. So this fuel detonates, which creates a pulse which partially blows out the back, but also partially reflects back up the tube to compress more fuel. Since there are no moving parts, this can take place at a very high rate of speed...The biggest problems I've read of are starting the thing...which was supposed to be the source of low-frequency rumbles at the Groom Lake site. The tube is "tuned" to a certain speed of waves inside it, and it doesn't want to run at other speeds. And...of course...noise. The thing is capable of producing lots of power...but its operation is much like that of the German pulse-jets, which sounded like flying jackhammers. But it definately could be propulsion for the future...but not to the extent that people would dream of...
      • Re:Aurora? (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Walt Dismal ( 534799 )
        A key factor was mentioned here: pulsejets are REALLY loud. So if we end up with a bunch of them flying around, where exactly will they be taking off and landing. Because airports in urban areas already have severe noise problems.
        • Let me repeat: pulse jets are not pulse detonation jets. Unlike pulse detonation jets, pure pulse jet research efforts have been all but abandoned as they were concluded to be too inefficent and overall inferior to any other jet design.

          Pulse jets are composed of a combustion section, a set of inlet shutters and an exhaust valve. Air enters the combustion chamber and the inlet shutters closes, forcing the combusting fuel-air mixture out through the exhaust valve, producing thrust. Pulse detonation jets have no such valves.
    • Re:Aurora? (Score:3, Informative)

      How could a helicopter replace the SR-71?

      Most likely, as was proven during the secrecy of the Stealth program (Have Blue) in the late 70's - early 80's, this project [spaceref.com] was the source of rumors for the Aurora Spyplane.
  • by Faust7 ( 314817 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @09:52PM (#6702359) Homepage
    'Pulse detonation is a hot topic in combustion research,' says Gabriel Roy of the Office of Naval Research.

    Sounds like they're strained for humor over there.
  • by temojen ( 678985 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @09:54PM (#6702371) Journal
    most of them probably won't make it across the english channel.
    • I assume that is a reference to one of the first successful long range rockets - the Nazi V-1 "buzz" bombs. They were powered by a very simple pulse jet engine, where many small explosions inside a one-way chamber would propel the rocket. Launched from Nazi-controlled France, the V-1s would cross the channel and eventually fall from the sky somewhere in the rough vicinity of their targets in Britain. As long as the buzz of the engine could be heard those on the ground knew they were safe. However if the
      • by temojen ( 678985 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @11:02PM (#6702766) Journal

        ok, once again.... the V1 was a missile propelled by a jet engine, not a rocket. A rocket carries it's own oxidizer with it. The V2 was a missile propelled by a rocket.

        Neither was the first successfull guided missile, and the V2 was not the first successfull Liquid-Fueled Rocket. The germans had wire-guided air-launched anti-ship missiles before either.

  • Doughnut on a rope (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mhesseltine ( 541806 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @09:54PM (#6702376) Homepage Journal

    Would this system possibly be the type of propulsion that produced the infamous "doughnut on a rope" vapor trail? If so, then this technology has been in development for quite a while. </fox_mulder>

    • "Would this system possibly be the type of propulsion that produced the infamous "doughnut on a rope" vapor trail?"

      Is that kinda like the little rings that blew out the back of all the ships in the Jetsons?

    • by myklgrant ( 529062 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @12:42AM (#6703236) Homepage
      Actually the doughnut on a rope trail is probably from a regular jet. I watched the contrail of a 4-engine jet (probably a 747) at altitude coalesce into a perfect doughnut on a rope trail. It was almost exactly like that in the picture. Until then I had been a believer in Aurora. I've never been so disappointed in all my life ;)
    • at 40 detonations a second plus this would not be a likely candidate for the donut on a rope poerplant.
    • Are you actually trying to propose this as a new theory, or did you read it somewhere else and are pretending to have come up with it? I have never read a description of the "donuts on a rope" contrail without an accompanying description of pulse jets, and the connection is incredibly obvious.

      And why is this type of contrail "infamous"?
      • infamous because (Score:3, Informative)

        by wiredog ( 43288 )
        The USAF kept saying "We have no idea what that is, it's not ours, etc". While Aviation Week kept publishing pictures of the things flying over Nevada and Utah, well away from the airline flight routes.
  • by neostorm ( 462848 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @09:56PM (#6702391)
    "...But there are big engineering issues--thermal fatigue, noise..." ...Potential explosions...

    • "...But there are big engineering issues--thermal fatigue, noise..." ...Potential explosions...

      I'll stick my neck out a bit further- definite explosions. The whole point is that you make the fuel detonate. That's how it works ;-)

    • by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:59PM (#6702757)
      "...But there are big engineering issues--thermal fatigue, noise..." ...Potential explosions...

      That reminds me of the quote from Colonel Albert Pope in the 1890s (owner of one of the first electric car companies): Internal combustion engines will never take off because "people won't want to sit on top of an explosion".

  • I wonder (Score:5, Informative)

    by anethema ( 99553 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @09:56PM (#6702392) Homepage
    If any research is beeing done into the bladeless (Tesla) turbine?

    The bladeless turbine pump is hailed as the best thing to hit industrial pumps ever.

    All you need to reverse the intake and exaust and it is an engine (was orignally designed as an engine)

    Pulse detonation seems to be the best way to power these turbines. Tesla claims over 10 horsepower to the pound of engine weight.

    With this horsepower to weight ratio, I wonder what could be acomplished using this instead of a conventional turbine.

    More info on the tesla turbine here. [execpc.com]
    • Re:I wonder (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      "Tesla claims over 10 horsepower to the pound of engine weight."

      He also claimed to be able to send electricity through the ground without wires controllably for six miles. In the biik "the fantastic inventions of tesla" there are a lot of fantastic but groundless claims he made such as earthquake machines etc.
      • Re:I wonder (Score:5, Interesting)

        by anethema ( 99553 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:22PM (#6702570) Homepage
        Considering his inventions (AC power, 3 phase power, the transformer, modern radio,electromagnetic motors, fluorescent lighting etc etc etc), I think he was a pretty smart guy. I wouldnt dismiss out of hand the things that he's talked about just because you dont understand how it works.

        Not only that, it is very easy to build a tesla turbine, and pictures exist with witness comments on the one that tesla built getting almost 10hp per pound.

        That, and the tesla turbine only has 1 moving part. The disks spinning inside the housing. Sounds like it makes for a pretty reliable engine to me.
        • Considering his inventions (AC power)


          well if you can get power from an Anonymous Coward, slashdot should have the energy market cornered...
        • by SuperBanana ( 662181 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @11:20PM (#6702854)
          Considering his inventions (AC power, 3 phase power, the transformer, modern radio,electromagnetic motors, fluorescent lighting etc etc etc), I think he was a pretty smart guy. I wouldnt dismiss out of hand the things that he's talked about just because you dont understand how it works.

          Except that Tesla also thought we should 'beam' electrical power through the air by generating masive RF fields; you'd have a big RF generator in the center of town, and everyone would have magical antennas that harvested this magnetic energy. Instead of, say, just laying down some wire underground or on poles. It's a good thing he isn't around today, because the tin-foil-hat wearing anti-cell-phone-tower freaks would tear him apart.

          If anything, some of the 'greatest' minds of our time have also had some of the 'greatest' moments of stupidity. For example, Edison(who strongly believed DC was much safer, outweighing transmission problems) was mostly responsible for death by electrocution; he figured the public would be shocked by how easily a man was killed by AC, and would fear it as a result...putting an end to Tesla, who was quickly taking Edison Electric to the cleaners, with more efficient generation and transmission.

          It backfired, massively- it amounted to torture and the man was electrocuted repeatedly and at length before finally dying; it literally cooked him alive and at times they had to stop and put out the fires on his body. Those who witnessed it were indeed horrified beyond belief. Common view was that AC was NOT lethal, and Edison was responsible for the slow death, rather than the quick painless instant killer he had promised.

          • Wireless power is unfeasable, but it would certanly be nice, even on a small scale. *looks at full powerstrip plugged into a full 4 wall outlet with an extension cord with a double end* But yes, telsa was a kook, probaly all the EM radiation cooked his brain a bit. Towards the end of his career he was a true mad scientist, even working on a "death ray"
          • Some of his ideas certinaly do sound like quackery.
            BUT

            Some of the quackiest ideas were built, photographed and demonstrated.

            I dont get how he is dismissed as a quack so often. Im sure something called a death ray dindt help, but he never invented something he couldnt demonstrate. Considering he is one of the fathers of the era you live in now (much more than edison) you should give him some more credit.
      • Re:I wonder (Score:3, Informative)

        by clbyjack81 ( 597903 )
        >>there are a lot of fantastic but groundless claims he >>[Tesla] made such as earthquake machines etc.

        Actually, the earthquake machine was a reality. It was a small box that would be attached to a structural I-beam in a building. It had a small hammer that would tap the beam, then wait for the crest of the vibration wave to pass under the hammer at which point it would tap again. This process repeated until the beam was shaking quite violently. Police were actually called to his workshop a
    • Re:I wonder (Score:3, Interesting)

      Hmmm, Hey check this out:

      Chrysler Corporation Turbine Car [fourforty.com]

      There were actually put into limited production, but then the 70's fuel shortage ended and no one cared enough to have them actually made en masse, if I recall correctly.
    • All you need to reverse the intake and exaust and it is an engine (was orignally designed as an engine)

      Since the apparatus described in your link is axisymmetric: when you put air through it, which way do you expect it to turn?
      • You really should look stuff up before asking these sorts of questions, but heres an answer anyways.

        http://www.animatedsoftware.com/pics/pumps/tesla .g if

        Look at the side view, imagine blowing air into the intake at the top right. Try to imagine which way the discs would spin.
    • This might sound silly, but I actually built such a rig. Melted the fins in a matter of a few minutes, but also produced huge torque and HP for the few minutes it ran. I'm planning on building another rig, using more heat-resistant materials, this fall.
  • by mkweise ( 629582 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @09:57PM (#6702401)
    To quote from Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]:

    Nuclear pulse propulsion is a proposed method of spacecraft propulsion that uses nuclear explosions for thrust. It was briefly developed as Project Orion by ARPA. It was invented by Stanislaw Ulam in 1957, and is the invention of which he was most proud.

    Calculations show that this form of rocket would combine both high thrust and a high specific impulse, a rarity in rocket design. Specific impulses from 2000 (easy, yet ten times chemical specific impulses) to 100,000 (requires specialized nuclear explosives and spacecraft design) are possible, with thrusts in the millions of tons.
  • by Dancin_Santa ( 265275 ) <DancinSanta@gmail.com> on Thursday August 14, 2003 @09:59PM (#6702408) Journal
    In America (the leading consumer of air travel) the FAA has limits on the noise level generated by an airport. From the article, this is such a big problem that the development of this engine in passenger aircraft may be halted because of the inability to dampen the noise output. Strictly speaking, this is going to be a rocket engine, not an passenger jet engine. It probably won't even be a military jet engine either, the military doesn't like their pilots deaf.

    The FAA rules were never a big problem for me, though. The reindeer are fairly silent except for the actual landing part.
    • by Reverberant ( 303566 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:26PM (#6702598) Homepage
      FAA has limits on the noise level generated by an airport.

      A lot (if not most) of the aviation authorities around the world set noise limits for aviation noise, including the EU and the U.K. What's interesting is that the FAA and various airports have more or less mandated the phase-out of noisier airplanes (Stage 1 & Stage 2 aircraft). If these planes wind up being noisier than the current Stage 3 aircraft, the U.S. air industry is gonna be tied up in lawsuits for a looong time.

      Also, commercial supersonic flights over the continental U.S. are banned partly for noise reasons. Sonic booms are not good things for people and animals over the long term. I would assume that supersonic flights would be restricted to intercontinental travel.

      It probably won't even be a military jet engine either, the military doesn't like their pilots deaf.

      FYI, U.S. military jets tend to be much louder than commercial jets. Military jets are designed for performance, not environmental-friendliness.

      • by StressGuy ( 472374 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @09:04AM (#6704785)
        From earlier post:

        "...I would assume that supersonic flights would be restricted to intercontinental travel...."

        Yup, that is correct. However, the actual regulation has been interpreted in the past to mean that you cannot create a shockwave at ground level. When the BD-10J kitplane was available (capable of Mach 1.6 at altitude), the argument was made that it was so small that, even at Mach 1.6, the shockwave it created would dissipate before getting to ground level.

        I don't recall how far that argument went and there is no BD-10J anymore. Not to mention that commercial/militiary aircraft will be a lot bigger. Still, interesting interpretation.

        All of this may be mute though, assuming they solve lifespan, flow-field, and tuning issues; it's still going to be noisy as hell unless they also plan to use some sort of active system to destructively interfere with the noise - and that will cost energy.

        best of luck to them though....very intriguing problem.

    • Dual-system (Score:3, Interesting)

      by phorm ( 591458 )
      Allowing it to burn fuel for localized (low) flight and explode it to explode for fast-acceleration/long-distance (high altitude) flight might perhaps solve this? Of course, I'm not sure how much work or overhead it would be to create a system that allows both methods to be used....
    • Why have you been keeping the reindeer propulsion system a secret from the world? You should really consider putting it under the GPL for the world to benefit. Yeah, I know, you got laughed at when you tried to sell it, and so you see no potential profit from it, but that's exactly the reason why you need to GPL it! If you GPL your tech, then once people stop laughing, they'll see that's it actually works. The world could really use something like that.

      If you can get presents to all the world's childre
    • If you actually pick up a copy of Popular Science and read the article, they talk about making a "hybrid" system-- pulse detonation coupled with a regular jet (as found on 747's, etc.) The pulse detonation would occur on the outside of the turbines, where some fuel is wasted. The fuel is simply detonated again, providing even more power for your buck. I'm sure the noise level would be negligible, especially once one is up in the air.
  • by ReyTFox ( 676839 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:00PM (#6702426)
    ...we might finally get affordable supersonic jet transportation?

    I can't stand flights of over an hour or two myself, and it would probably encourage even greater mobility then we have today if it's cheap enough. For example, transcontinental dating.
  • by femto ( 459605 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:01PM (#6702429) Homepage
    Maybe Bruce Simpson [aardvark.co.nz] in New Zealand has the lead on them? He's been building pulse jets for years and even has DIY [aardvark.co.nz] plans for one. He's considering covering the design with th GPL. Imagine that, a GPLd jet engine!

    Yes, he is the guy of DIY cruise missile [interestingprojects.com] fame.

    • Bruce's pulse jets are very low-tech, deflagration engines. The PopSci article is about detonation pulse engines.

      • by NewtonsLaw ( 409638 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @11:38PM (#6702940)
        Bruce's pulse jets are very low-tech, deflagration engines

        Not strictly true. Although simple, the X-Jet design is not really "very low-tech" -- a lot of time and money has been invested in analysing a phenomenon called "high magnitude combustion" which, while not "detonation" still provides combustion efficiencies almost three times higher than the deflagration that occurs in a conventional pulsejet.

        Whereas the flame-front in a normal pulsejet travels at just a few tens of meters per second, HMC occurs with a flame-front that travels at the speed of sound in the air/fuel mixture.

        While this is still well short of the Mach 5-6 flamefront that is produced in a PDE, the X-Jet using HMC is an engine that can be produced now in commercial quantities and with power to weight ratios that make it an extremely viable source of propulsion for a wide range of flying craft.

        The other advantage is that it can be manufactured at a much lower cost than a PDE and without many of the other problems.
    • by Mattsson ( 105422 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:58PM (#6702747) Journal
      A pulse jet and a pulse detonation engine is not the same thing.
      Pulse jet's was what the germans used in their "buzz-bombs" during WWII.
      As far as I've been able to conclude the greatest difference is in the burnrate of the fuel.
      In a pulse jet you have a series of "slow" burns or explotions at a fairly low rate.
      In a pulse detonation engine you've got insanely fast burns (hence "detonation") at serveral hundred detonations per second.
      One of the greatest enginering tasks was apparently to be able to not only achieve a detonation instead of a burn or explosion, but to also do this continously at a high rate.
    • The GPL is an inappropriate "license" for a jet engine. For instance, it says he must provide source code to those who he provides binaries. This can sort of be construed to mean that if he builds a jet for me, he must give me the architectural plans.

      He should use a license more suited to content than code, such as the Creative Commons licenses.
      • The jet engine itself cannot be covered by the GPL, as you cannot copyright an actual jet engine. The GPL would only apply to the plans which are used to build the engine. Presumambly if you gave the plans to someone, you would also have to give them soft copies. Also it would prevent you from only giving them half the plans, and obscuring som detail, as the GPL requires that a work be distributed as a whole or not at all.
        • The jet engine itself cannot be covered by the GPL, as you cannot copyright an actual jet engine.

          Sure you can; you can copyright a sculpture, after all.

          But the copyright will be next to useless--it protects the specific expression of ideas, rather than the ideas themselves, and a lot of physical ideas don't leave a lot of room for variation--and are, ergo, uncopyrightable.
  • by RcktMan77 ( 621927 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:17PM (#6702539)
    I actually did my Master's Research on a Pulsed Detonation Engine (Rocket actually, since we were providing the oxygen). It is a more efficient form of propulsion (for thermo geeks, detonation can be modeled by a constant volume Humphrey thermo cycle, rather than the constant pressure Brayton cycle and a comparison of efficiencies results in a vast improvement for the pulsed detonation engine). It certainly isn't too new as far as the idea being thrown around, but it certainly is gaining momentum as being more and more plausible. Aside from the efficiency benefits, the engine itself results in a much simpler design and weight savings rather than relying on today's complex turbomachinery. Furthermore, pulsed detonation engines offer the potential for substantiative performance increases; finally bringing hypersonic flight to within a practical reach. A detonation is different than a deflagration in basically the speed at which combustion occurs. Deflagration occurs at relatively low flame speeds on the order of 1 or 2 m/sec.; whereas, detonation is a supersonic mode of combustion. Most forms of combustion that we are familiar with today utilize the deflagrative mode. The article was accurate in stating that this technology still has a few hurdles to overcome. Primarily, the pulsed detonation engine is an unsteady flow phenomenon that requires a periodic input to control fuel injection into the detonation chamber coupled with a very large energy input to ignite the fuel and reach a critical Chapman-Jouguet velocity. Such energy input has been accomplished so far using an arc igniter, but doing so on a reliable basis at frequencies of at least 100Hz, necessary for practical use have been somewhat of a challenge thus far.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Maybe you know more about PDEs than I do, but everything I've read on ACTUAL engines show much lower efficiency for PDEs than either turbojets or Ramjets. There seems to be a midrange where they are competitive, but for >Mach 2.3 for Ramjets and Compression ratios greater than 4 in turbojets, PDEs lose out.

      PDEs have two major advantages:
      They're simple, which means if you only want to use it once, the cost is potentially lower than a turbojet, and there are fewer ways in which it can fail.

      You can pump i
    • Some of the guys on the Pulse Engine forum suggested using a blank ammunition cartrige to achieve the necessary starting energy.

      Z ;)
  • by mikeophile ( 647318 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:18PM (#6702543)
    I don't know if they are already doing so, but it seems a natural match to use something like this [discover.com] in conjunction with a pulsejet.
    • don't know if they are already doing so, but it seems a natural match to use something like this in conjunction with a pulsejet.

      Although the link you've provided is very interesting, I highly doubt that the two technologies are remotely compatable. The PDE is based on supersonic explosions that create shockwaves, whereas the TASHE uses sonic propagation of energy to achieve the desired result. The difference between the two methods is rather profound... almost all of the equations change when you al
  • by Perdition ( 208487 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:21PM (#6702563)
    I think that several such paradigm shift in several disciplines must occur in order to keep space exploration viable in the near future. I am always impressed by the near-wishful thinking that MUST occur before science leaps forward. Plus, they're competing for juicy government contracts, and that always greases the wheel.
  • Good to see computer geeks are not the only people to have silver bullet hopes in new technology.

    Us: OOP, patterns, Extreme Programming...

    Them: fire, matches, detonation...

  • by daves ( 23318 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:27PM (#6702600) Journal
    At the Dayton Air Show. It was mounted on a small UAV-sized plane. It consisted of a standard block from a 4 cylinder car engine with the bottom half, including crankshaft and pistons, removed. Each cylinder had a four foot or so exhaust pipe welded to the bottom of it, pointing to the rear. It ran like a normal engine, but exhausted the explosions directly, instead of pushing on the pistons.

    The weird part - a whole other engine was needed to run the valve cams.

    They were pitching it as a cheap, reliable replacement for things like disposable UAVs and cruise missiles, in the short term.

    It sure looked loud.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:28PM (#6702602)
    Is this what they are talking about? Dr. Fun [ibiblio.org]
  • Oshkosh demo (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    The AirForce research guys demoed a pulsejet made out of automotive parts at Oshkosh this year. There's a link and a picture at Avweb [avweb.com]
  • USAF (Score:5, Informative)

    by n1nj4k3n ( 685377 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:39PM (#6702665)
    The United States Air Force Research Lab Propulsion Directorate [af.mil] has a pulse detonation engine program as well. Pics and story here [af.mil]. Apparently their engine is made mostly of off-the-shelf automotive parts. It's powered by any type of general aviation fuel (Jet-A, JP-8), and even gasoline.
  • by OYAHHH ( 322809 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @10:51PM (#6702714)
    If,

    You were to go through your issues of PS you would find an incredible amount of "wonderful engineering" that never ever shows up anywhere.

    It's seems like there is at least a once a year issue of PS that specifically describes a stupendous advance in airships that's gonna haul all of the world's heavy objects.

    Usually some big white triangular airship. Seen any of those lately. You get my drift....

  • by SnappingTurtle ( 688331 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @11:04PM (#6702778) Homepage
    But there are big engineering issues--thermal fatigue, noise.

    I suspect that "blowing shit up" is another one of those big issues.

  • by Air-conditioned cowh ( 552882 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @12:30AM (#6703185)
    I notice in the pictures that the lady standing next to the engine on the second page has no head.

    An engine that decapitates people is certainly very injurous to health.
  • Grandmother (Score:3, Funny)

    by Kethinov ( 636034 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @01:08AM (#6703359) Homepage Journal
    would chop fuel consumption by an amount that engineers would "kill their grandmothers" to get, Lidstone jokes
    I sure hope his grandmother wasn't reading that...
  • They don't mention scramjets at all. How do these compare, I wonder. Scramjets only work at huge speeds, so this is a point for the PDE.

    OTOH, from general considerations (which may be wrong, I am not a rocket scientist) the scramjet should be more efficient. In it there is no obstacle to the air flow, the air only gets compressed. With the PDEs, as far as I got from the article, there is a wheel with holes perpendicular to the air flow that blocks (and unblocks) the air flow regularly.

    • scramjets are completely different. They work on a principle of compressing the incoming air and then using a combustion chamber to blow it out the back at higher speeds. The big difference is that the air intake is compressed down slightly and that the combustion chamber has a constant combustion going on.

      A pulsejet/detonation engine uses the previous detonation to compress the air/oxidizer for the next one. I've seen some designs with two outputs, it actually just oscillates between them. It's in
  • by tsa ( 15680 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @03:41AM (#6703813) Homepage
    Have you seen the very weird picture of a woman with no head and a deformed right arm on page 2 of the article? I wonder if she stood too close when the engine was switched on.
  • Assuming for a moment that it's possible to get this technology to work, the question of noise has been raised as a show stopper with regards it's commercial use.

    But two things spring to mind:

    1) Stealth aircraft use noise damping technology, and some of this might be appropriate even for this weird engine.

    2) Conventional engines will probably have to be used for take off and landing anyway. These can be commercial low-noise devices that just get the plane to/from off-shore locations where it can fire up it's PD engines.

    Just make sure you've finished your complementary drink at that point or you'll be wearing it for the rest of the flight...
    • by NewtonsLaw ( 409638 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @06:28AM (#6704262)
      I don't think you'll *ever* see a PDE in use on a passenger jet -- mainly because of the noise and vibration problem.

      When a PDE fires it doesn't just make a loud noise, it produces a train of supersonic shock waves that transfer vastly more energy than a regular acoustic (sound) wave.

      Standing in reasonable proximity (10 yards or so) of a large (but conventional) pulsejet will give you a really bad headache even if you're wearing hearing protection -- because the amplitude of the acoustic wave generated is so great that it hammers your skull and your body.

      It really surprises a lot of people when I demonstrate a very large pulsejet to them. They say that they feel it right to the core of their body and, despite using grade 5 hearing protection, their ears ring afterwards.

      Now multiply that by an order of magnitude (as is the case with a PDE) and you find that anyone within spitting distance will suffer actual physical harm consisting (at worst) damage to internal organs and (at best) concussion and damage to the inner ear as the shockwaves bash on your skull like a ball-peen hammer.

      I seem to recall the article mentioning that the shockwaves from the demo engine were still causing discomfort after passing through a concrete barrier?

      And, to be quite honest, I have to say that I don't think the engine attached to the Long-EZ and shown running in the video was actually producing true detonations at all.

      Now tell me how many airline passengers will pay good money to ride on a jackhammer, even if it is a supersonic jackhammer.

      I believe the real market for PDEs is unmanned aerial vehicles (including missiles) and as the airbreathing stage of LEO vehicles used for scientific or military purposes.
  • by gillbates ( 106458 ) on Friday August 15, 2003 @09:11AM (#6704817) Homepage Journal
    and a "predetonator" on each tube, which uses, supplemental oxygen, ethylene fuel and a Ferrari spark plug to kick-start detonation...[emphasis mine]

    IIRC, Ethylene oxide and oxygen are the primary ingredients in the fuel-air bomb. So, yeah, I would expect the equivalent of an open-ended bomb to produce more thrust than a conventional jet engine. I'll be more impressed when they can do this without supplemental oxygen, bomb fuel, and a large compressor to "simulate mach 4 speeds".

    Granted, it sounds promising, but as of yet they haven't managed to build a prototype which can run on conventional fuels (hydrocarbon based, ethyl alcohol, etc...). Furthermore, the article states that these engine may someday produce power from near standstill to hypersonic speeds, yet their prototype can't run at less than mach4, and requires supplemental O2 at that. Quite frankly, the ramjet designs of the 80's showed more promise than PDEs.

  • Oshkosh (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ptomblin ( 1378 ) <ptomblin@xcski.com> on Friday August 15, 2003 @09:17AM (#6704852) Homepage Journal
    At Oshkosh, there was somebody showing a VariEze with a Pulse Detonation Wave engine. I didn't catch whether it had actually flown with it. I took some pictures here [xcski.com].
    Don't be fooled by the USAF markings on the plane - I didn't see any indication that it had any sort connection to the military.

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