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China allegedly creates hypersonic tech twice as powerful as before, 79% fuel efficiency at six times the speed of sound

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China allegedly creates hypersonic tech twice as powerful as before​

The prototype engine demonstrated 79% fuel efficiency at six times the speed of sound, claimed Chinese military scientists.

Feb 19, 2023 06:30 AM EST

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Representational image: 3D illustration of a hypersonic missile.
estt/iStock

Chinese military researchers have allegedly made a big advancement in improving the effectiveness of air-breathing engines that utilize solid-state fuel for hypersonic flight.

The development may expand China's operational range of hypersonic missiles, doubling their combat potency, claimed a South China Morning Post (SCMP) report earlier this week.

"Such efficiency was considered 'remarkable' – nearly doubling that of a traditional scramjet engine working in similar conditions," noted Ma Likun, team lead of the study, an associate professor at the National University of Defence Technology in Changsha, Hunan province.

The technology slows incoming fresh air to less than sound speed before it enters the combustion chamber, allowing the fuel to burn more thoroughly.

The prototype engine was put to the test in a ground simulation of a flight at an altitude of 25 kilometers (15.5 miles) at Mach 6 speed (six times the speed of sound), and it produced fuel efficiency of 79 percent, which is nearly twice as high as a conventional scramjet engine under the same circumstances.

Boron-powered scramjet engine​

The primary fuel component for the prototype engine is boron powder, according to the researchers. Grey in color, boron may burn ferociously when it comes into contact with oxygen.

The researchers introduced boron powder into the combustion chamber, and by switching the powder injection mode from single to multiple nozzles, they produced extra shock waves that expanded and flowed higher toward the air entrance, instantly slowing the speed of the fresh air.

Thus allowing the boron powder to have more interaction with air molecules and undergo enhanced chemical reactions.

This led to a greater combustion temperature and more thrust, which enabled the engine to cruise farther and longer, claimed the researchers.

"A solid scramjet engine has numerous advantages, such as simple structure, high volume-specific impulse, high flame stability, and the potential to work in a wide speed range," Likun's team wrote in the paper.

Hypersonic missiles can fly at speeds of up to five times the speed of sound, and the development of the boron engine may make them more maneuverable and sensitive to targets, giving missile defense systems a little time to react.

Chian's disruptive technology mission​

The research team noted that certain engineering issues, such as fuel injector heat degradation, could limit the engine's ability to be reused.

They do, however, think that the information gathered from the ground tests will help with the development of the engine for a test flight.

The new engine could fulfill variable thrust requirements in various stages of flight thanks to its capacity to change itself practically as flexibly as a liquid fuel engine can, thus enhancing fuel efficiency and mobility.

China is also supporting the development of a number of competing hypersonic propulsion systems, such as an oblique detonation engine that can produce 10,000 times as much energy as conventional combustion.

According to Chinese authorities, such a disruptive technology might spark a revolution in human transportation and aid China in catching up to other countries in traditional jet engine technology.

Meanwhile, the new development of solid scramjet engine technology is claimed to be a key step toward China's objective, even though the first passenger flight may not occur until 2035.

The findings were first published in the Journal of Solid Rocket Technology on January 18, said the SCMP report.

 
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In another report from Mumbai India, the said Chinese technology was "stolen", "copied" by the Chinese spy balloons over the United States. The "free" Indians do not believe that China has the abilities to develop their own technologies without outsourcing everything to India from call centers to CEO's. :azn:
 
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This has a lot of military application especially bomber.
 
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