Fuel with Static Air in a Jet engine

AI Thread Summary
Jet engines require a running state to inject fuel because the engine must reach a minimum speed to generate sufficient power for the compressor and other systems. Injecting fuel with static air would not create the necessary conditions for combustion, leading to inefficient or ineffective ignition. The engine relies on the compression of air to mix with the fuel, creating hot gases that expand and drive the turbine. Without the engine running, the fuel injection would not sustain the combustion process. Therefore, fuel cannot be injected effectively without the engine operating.
TheBusFlyer
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Good evening,

Today's planes' need bleed air to start. Above a certain speed, igniters fire up and we inject fuel inside the combustor chamber. Why do we need to have the engine running to inject fuel (around 20%N2)? Can we simply not inject fuel with static air (i.e. when engine is not running)? What would happen if I would do so?

Thanks a lot!
 
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Jet engines work by compressing the air then injecting fuel. The resulting hot gasses expand rushing out the back turning a turbine that's connected to the compressor at the front.

This process only becomes self sustaining above a certain minimum speed (rpm). Below that speed the power generated isn't enough to run the compressor, fuel and oil pumps and shift the air that is going through the bypass.
 
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