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JP 7

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JP-7

JP-7 (Jet Propellant 7, MIL-DTL-38219) is a jet fuel developed by the U.S. Air Force for use in supersonic aircraft because of its high flash point and thermal stability. It is the fuel used in the Pratt & Whitney J58 engines, used in the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird. The skin friction of the aircraft's surface with the atmosphere at Mach 3+ cruising flight generates very high skin temperatures; therefore this special fuel was needed. The story told by Ben Rich in his book Skunk Works is that a lit match can be dropped in a bucket of JP-7 and the fuel will not ignite, and the match will be extinguished.

Contents

The Boeing X-51 Waverider uses JP-7 fuel to run the Pratt & Whitney SJY61 scramjet engine, with fuel capacity of some 270 lb (120 kg). As with the SR-71, the X-51A design super-cools this fuel (cooled by extended subsonic flight in the stratosphere; prior to acceleration to supersonic speeds); then, when in supersonic flight, the fuel is heated by its circulation through heat exchangers which transfer to it the heat load of the interior spaces of the airframe. The fuel is then pumped through rotating mechanical parts of the engines and auxiliary mechanical equipment, providing both lubrication and cooling. Finally at a temperature of nearly 550 °F (288 °C), it is pumped into the fuel nozzles of the engines.

JP-7 is a mixture composed primarily of hydrocarbons, including alkanes, cycloalkanes, alkylbenzenes, indanes/tetralins, and naphthalenes, with addition of fluorocarbons to increase its lubricant properties, an oxidizing agent to make it burn better, and a cesium containing compound known as A-50, which aided in disguising the radar and infrared signatures of the exhaust plume. The Blackbirds used approximately 36,000–44,000 pounds (16,000–20,000 kg) of fuel per hour of flight.

JP-7 is unusual in that it is not a distillate fuel but is created from special blending stocks in order to have very low (<3%) concentration of highly volatile components like benzene or toluene, and almost no sulfur, oxygen, and nitrogen impurities. It has low vapor pressure and high thermal oxidation stability. It must operate across a wide range of temperatures, from near freezing at high altitude, to high temperature of airframe and engine parts being cooled. Its volatility must be low to make it flash-resistant in these high temperatures.

The very low volatility and relative unwillingness of JP-7 to be ignited required triethylborane (TEB) to be injected into the engine in order to initiate combustion and allow afterburner operation in flight. The SR-71 had a limited number of "shots" of TEB (usually 16) and those had to be managed carefully on long-duration flights with multiple stages of relatively low-altitude air refueling and normal high-altitude cruise flight.

History

Shell Oil developed JP-7 in 1955. Company vice president Jimmy Doolittle arranged for Shell to develop the fuel for the Central Intelligence Agency and United States Air Force's secret Lockheed U-2 spy plane, which needed a low-volatility fuel that would not evaporate at high altitude. Manufacturing several hundred thousand gallons of the new fuel required the petroleum byproducts Shell normally used to make its Flit insecticide, causing a nationwide shortage of that product that year.

Properties

  • Melting Point −30 °C (−22 °F)
  • Boiling Point (1 atm) 282–288 °C (540–550 °F)
  • Density (at 15 °C) 779–806 kg/m³
  • Vapor Pressure (at 300 °F (149 °C)) 155 mmHg (3.00 psi) (20.7 kPa)
  • Flashpoint 60 °C (140 °F)
  • Net heat of combustion min. 43.5 MJ/kg
  • References

    JP-7 Wikipedia