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Title: Miniature Liquid-Fueled Combustion Chamber
UC Case No: 2001-369-3-ott
Categories: Mechanical Engineering: Aerospace
Background: Several challenges exist with the development of miniature combustors (sometimes named micro-combustors). The large surface-to-volume ratio can result in substantial heat losses causing inefficiency at the least and flame quenching at the worst. The low residence times causes difficulty in completing vaporization, mixing, and chemical oxidation in the small volume of the combustion chamber. Scale-down of traditional designs for chambers with direct injection of liquid fuels do not provide satisfactory energy conversion.
Technology: This invention allows direct injection of conventional liquid fuels (e.g., kerosene or alcohol) into a combustor that is only a few centimeters in length and less than a centimeter in transverse dimension with nearly 100% energy conversion. Operation at elevated pressures is possible. The concept works with continuous or intermittent combustion. The design allows for one gram per second or less of fuel to be vaporized, mixed with the air flow, and burned in a chamber about the size of a cigarette. If this is combined with a miniature compression mechanism and a miniature expansion mechanism for work extraction (e.g., turbo-machinery or piston) to form an engine with 25% or more overall thermal efficiency, it is possible to deliver a kilowatt or more of power. The combustor can also be used for jet propulsion. For miniature ramjets and turbojets, the combustor should achieve near 100% efficiency and allow minimal specific fuel consumption. For liquid-propellant rockets, the specific impulse should compare favorably with values for the same propellants in larger rockets.
Contact: Demetrios Andrikos, Director, Engineering & Physical Sciences
Office of Technology Alliances
University of California, Irvine
380 University Tower
Irvine, CA 92697-7700

Phone: (949) 824-1233
FAX: (949) 824-2899
Email: dandriko@uci.edu
Patent Status: Pending
UCI School: School of Engineering
Department: Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering