scholarly journals Problem of nuclear-laser power engineering and methods of their solution

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 257-263
Author(s):  
Petr P. Dyachenko ◽  
Anatoly V. Zrodnikov ◽  
Oleg F. Kukharchuk ◽  
Alexey A. Suvorov

The concept of a high power reactor-laser system based on a nuclear pumped optical quantum amplifier (OKUYaN) was formulated at IPPE in the mid-1980-ies. The idea amounted to the use of wide-aperture OKUYaN as an amplifier within the already well-known “master laser – two-pass amplifier with phase conjugation” scheme. The structure of such an amplifier includes a system of two neutron-coupled units – an ignition reactor (RB) and a nuclear pumped laser amplifier (LB). The ignition unit is a compact multi-core pulsed fast neutron reactor. The laser amplifier unit operates on thermal neutrons and, with regard to the neutronics, it is a subcritical booster zone of the ignition reactor unit. Unique reactor-laser complex incorporating demonstration sample of a pulsed reactor-laser system based on OKUYaN (test facility “Stand B”) having no analogues anywhere in the world, was developed and put into operation at IPPE in 1999 for the purpose of substantiation of basic principles of the OKUYaN concept and demonstration of the possibility of its practical implementation, as well as verification of calculation codes and development of relevant equipment elements. Problems overcome in the development and construction of “Stand B” test facility, the choice and justification of the neutronics and laser characteristics of the OKUYaN demonstration sample are discussed in the present paper. Provided are the results of a detailed computational-experimental study of the demonstration sample characteristics, the data from systems studies of direct conversion of nuclear fission energy into laser radiation energy in complex reactor-laser devices and the results of examination of prospects for the development of nuclear-laser power engineering.

1991 ◽  
Vol 21 (12) ◽  
pp. 1291-1292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michail V Vasil'ev ◽  
Vladimir Yu Venediktov ◽  
Alexey A Leshchev ◽  
P M Semenov ◽  
V G Sidorovich ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
В.Ф. Лебедев ◽  
К.В. Павлов ◽  
Г.В. Бурковский ◽  
А.В. Федин

Compact laser system based on Nd:YAG-laser with self-phase conjugation for remote analysis of substances at least ten meters distance by the Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy was proposed.


Author(s):  
Erlendur Steinthorsson ◽  
Adel Mansour ◽  
Brian Hollon ◽  
Michael Teter ◽  
Clarence Chang

Participating in NASA’s Environmentally Responsible Aviation (ERA) Project, Parker Hannifin built and tested multipoint Lean Direct Injection (LDI) fuel injectors designed for NASA’s N+2 55:1 Overall Pressure-Ratio (OPR) gas turbine engine cycles. The injectors are based on Parker’s earlier three-zone injector (3ZI) which was conceived to enable practical implementation of multipoint LDI schemes in conventional aviation gas turbine engines. The new injectors offer significant aerodynamic design flexibility, excellent thermal performance, and scalability to various engine sizes. The injectors built for this project contain 15 injection points and incorporate staging to enable operation at low power conditions. Ignition and flame stability were demonstrated at ambient conditions with ignition air pressure drop as low as 0.3% and fuel-to-air ratio (FAR) as low as 0.011. Lean Blowout (LBO) occurred at FAR as low as 0.005 with air at 460 K and atmospheric pressure. A high pressure combustion testing campaign was conducted in the CE-5 test facility at NASA Glenn Research Center at pressures up to 250 psi and combustor exit temperatures up to 2,033 K (3,200 °F). The tests demonstrated estimated LTO cycle emissions that are about 30% of CAEP/6 for a reference 60,000 lbf thrust, 54.8-OPR engine. This paper presents some details of the injector design along with results from ignition, LBO and emissions testing.


1990 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 235-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
I Yu Anikeev ◽  
A A Gordeev ◽  
I G Zubarev ◽  
A B Mironov ◽  
S I Mikhaĭlov

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