Shcramjet
A shock-induced combustion ramjet engine is a concept of air-breathing ramjet engine, proposed to be used for hypersonic and/or single-stage-to-orbit propulsion applications.
Design
The shcramjet engine geometry is simple and similar to scramjet, varying only in the combustor design. The engine includes a supersonic inlet followed by a combustion chamber and a nozzle, respectively. The inlet design is similar to a scramjet, in which the whole nose structure is used as inlet. Combustion in a shcramjet can occur in shock-induced combustion or detonation combustion, depending on the strength of the inducing shock. If ignition occurs far enough downstream that the ensuing combustion process does not influence the preceding shock, the combustion is said to be shock-induced. However, for extremely fast reactions, ignition occurs close to the preceding shock wave and the combustion couples with the shock wave and forms a detonation wave. Therefore, detonation wave ramjet, or oblique detonation wave engine, is a particular case of shcramjet.Though shock and detonation waves are related to high pressure loss during combustion, the theoretical total pressure loss associated with shcramjet combustor approaches that of the scramjet engine at increasing mach numbers. This fact, together with the simpler engine geometry with concomitant increase in component efficiencies, results in superior predicted performance at flight Mach numbers beyond 12.
Oblique detonation wave engine
This engine funnels a mixture of air and fuel at hypersonic speeds toward a ramp, which creates a shock wave. This shock wave heats the mixture and causes it to detonate, ejecting exhaust gasses. Such an approach burns nearly 100% of the fuel. In theory, vehicle speeds could reach 17 times the speed of sound.A critical challenge is to confine the detonation in a small area, without allowing it to direct energy upstream towards the fuel source or downstream where it loses force. In 2021 an experimental device maintained a detonation in a fixed location for 3 seconds, far longer than earlier attempts.