saber1357 said:
Like you said, a turbine needs gas to be heated in order to provide power to the compressor. I am trying to find out an alternative that DOES NOT require gas, hence does not require a turbine.
From my research, I have only found ducted fans that use fans. Would adding a compressor still classify the engine as a ducted fan? I ask because the purpose of a ducted fan is to produce high air velocity, and a compressor would produce low air low velocity.
But also Force = Pressure * Area
So what is the difference between producing more force and having higher air velocity?
I am having trouble in understanding what you actually want to prove.
Anyways let's see, a jet engine also has a ducted fan, which accounts for almost 80% of total thrust the engine produces. Now where do you get energy to turn this fan?? yup, one employs a turbine. To operate a turbine, one needs compressed gas(as the turbine exhausts into atmosphere, that's why compressed). Secondly, why gas is heated?? So that, it not only extracts work for the compressor, but also for the fan & all other accessories(air conditioning unit, control surface actuator, actually each & every need of an aircraft ).
You ll better understand if you see brayton cycle(standard cycle for gas power units) on T-s diagram. If the turbine is directly fed the fluid from the compressor, it ll only be able to turn the compressor alone & that too, ideally.
Try to apply conservation of energy law.
Would adding a compressor still classify the engine as a ducted fan?
Would the compressor not require an energy source?? And suppose the energy source is anything but a turbine, what is the compressor doing??, feeding a ducted fan compressed air??
A jet engine accelerates a small small amount of air to a very high velocity, while a propeller accelerates a large amount of air to a moderate velocity. Therefore to obtain some specified value of thrust, either mass flow rate is increased or acceleration is increased(Newton's second law).