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Powered By ‘Air-Breathing’ Magnetic Fluid Engines, China Determined To Have A Fleet Of Hypersonic Planes By 2035

China is reportedly developing and testing its hypersonic technology at an unprecedented pace. It claims to have added another engine to its arsenal that can propel it to the forefront of the hypersonic race.

China’s hypersonic weapons program hopes to springboard itself into the future with an “air-breathing” magnetic fluid engine that might make it commercially possible to go anywhere on Earth in under an hour.

By 2035, China intends to construct a hypersonic passenger fleet that will use near-Earth orbit to go to any destination in the world in under an hour. Even though this program has been ridiculed by Western observers, China remains committed to developing an aircraft of this caliber and expanding the fleet in over a decade after a successful operation.

The program’s lead scientist claimed that the super-quiet engine with no moving parts will also aid in the construction of the next-generation launch vehicle, which is expected to enhance China’s space capability tremendously.

The ‘Next Generation Launch Vehicle’ is likely to launch a crewed mission to space and could potentially make its first flight in 2026. An advanced engine powering it could turn out to be a technological space milestone for the communist nation.




A concept model for a new-generation launch vehicle on display in Zhuhai Show, 2018-CASC

The experimental engine, according to Wei Baoxi, who has overseen several of China’s “milestone” hypersonic test flights, might drastically increase the vehicle’s flight efficiency and stability.

The engine, known as magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) drive apparently generates thrust from an electrically charged fluid that is forced through it by an electromagnetic force, and it would be used in tandem with the scramjet, another air-breathing engine, SCMP was informed.




Magnetohydrodynamic drive – Wikipedia


The MHD was designed to power nuclear submarines, but due to the low conductivity of saltwater, it was deemed inappropriate.

https://twitter.com/PMagnetE/status/1377117464543125511?s=20&t=c-Kli28sP7FfQEXkpyq_8A

 

Air molecules on the surface of an aircraft traveling at five times the speed of sound or more, on the other hand, become electrically charged, making the futuristic engine’s working medium ideal.

The MHD engine has the potential to alter near-Earth orbit flight and catapult China to the forefront of the aerospace race, according to Wei, who is also deputy director of mixed cycle engine development at the Beijing Power Machinery Research Institute.

“This technological revolution is a historic opportunity that China cannot afford to miss,” he said. “With an advantage in technology, a solid industrial base and continuous innovation, China could take a unique path to develop new powering systems for aerospace activities.”

China’s focus seems to be hinged on viability and near-orbit travel as a few weeks ago, it also completed a test flight for a new engine, which analysts predicted would power the country’s future hypersonic and near-space jets, according to Chinese state media — Global Times.

China’s Hypersonic Dream Engine

Winged hypersonic planes, according to Wei, will eventually replace regular rockets as the backbone of near-orbit transportation. According to him, the MHD drive might boost the total efficiency of air-breathing space-planes by 10%, compared to scramjets, which suck in air and mix it with fuel to achieve combustion.

Wei and his research team wrote in a report published last month in the Chinese peer-reviewed journal ‘Aerospace China’ that air-breathing propulsion “would be the method that human beings must adopt to attain great efficiency in travel between the Earth and space.”

A magnetohydrodynamic drive, also known as an MHD accelerator, is a method for propelling vehicles using just electric and magnetic fields, with no moving components, by employing magnetohydrodynamics to accelerate an electrically conductive propellant (liquid or gas). The fluid is directed to the rear and as a reaction, the vehicle accelerates forward.




China is Developing a Hypersonic Plane That Can Fly at 12,000MPH; it resembles Boeing X-47C

The MHD drive, according to Wei, could assist overcome many of the technological hurdles to make commercial hypersonic space flying a reality, SCMP stated. Currently, as the Mach number grows, the thrust created by air-breathing engines declines, and the extremely high temperatures generated can damage the plane’s surface.

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