A couple of important notes:
1. The throat radius depends on the radius of your combustion chamber. The flow is subsonic and therefore, for the converging portion of the nozzle, we also need to know the temperature, pressure, and density of the exhaust products to avoid shocks at the throat, but successfully reach sonic condition at, or very near, the throat (not precisely at the throat because in real engines, combustion is persisting at the throat). But this is also contingent on what you're assuming about your system. Are you assuming equilibrium combustion conditions leaving the CC?
2. Ramjets have a minimum operating Mach number where below this Mach number, the engine unstarts. Similar to what
@jack action has stated, there is an expansion ratio at which you over expand your flow to a point where shocks occur in the nozzle, the nozzle bows, and the engine fails. So, the altitude at which you want to operate this engine is now in question.
3. You haven't mentioned whether you ask your question for actual applications in a system you are working on, or if this is just homework. If this is homework, what are your assumptions?Ultimately, our answers are completely contingent on what you're trying to do. I site the ramjet because you can theoretically provide operating Mach ranges for the J-58 engine on the SR-71, but in
reality, there are an
absurd amount of controls and odd flow bleeds to make the engine actually work (see page 5-22). I'd agree with my cohorts here in that when you provide no context for your question and then expect answers, you are in the wrong place. I hope my questions above and the link I've provided display to you that, even though your question is simple in theory, there are a slew of complications that may surround your question and it can be very hard to answer.