The Synthesis of Butylsilanes by a Large-Scale Reduction with Lithium Aluminum Hydride (open access)

The Synthesis of Butylsilanes by a Large-Scale Reduction with Lithium Aluminum Hydride

"Eighty pounds of butylsilanes required for test purposes was synthesized by reducing butyltrichlorosilane with lithium aluminum hydride in dioxane solution. This was safely and successfully accomplished by operating in steel equipment under an atmosphere of oil-pumped nitrogen to minimize the hazards involved in conducting this operation on a large scale. The apparatus and procedure used to carry out the necessary manipulations are described in this report" (p. 1).
Date: July 22, 1953
Creator: Kaye, Samuel; Tannenbaum, Stanley & Hipsher, Harold F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Auxiliary and Ejector Pumping on the Mach Number Attainable in a 4 1/2- by 4 1/2-Inch Slotted Tunnel at Low Pressure Ratios (open access)

Effects of Auxiliary and Ejector Pumping on the Mach Number Attainable in a 4 1/2- by 4 1/2-Inch Slotted Tunnel at Low Pressure Ratios

Report presenting the results of an investigation to determine the pressure ratios required to operate a slotted tunnel through a range of Mach numbers where the speed variation is affected by removal of air from the main stream by auxiliary pumping, use of a main-stream-operated ejector located downstream of the test section, and a combination of these methods. Testing was conducted in order to improve the accuracy of transonic wind-tunnel testing.
Date: January 22, 1954
Creator: Dennard, John S. & Little, Barney H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight Determination of Drag of Normal-Shock Nose Inlets With Various Cowling Profiles at Mach Numbers From 0.9 to 1.5 (open access)

Flight Determination of Drag of Normal-Shock Nose Inlets With Various Cowling Profiles at Mach Numbers From 0.9 to 1.5

Report discussing free-flight tests of normal-shock nose-inlet models with 1-series, parabolic, and conic cowling profiles in order to investigate the external drag characteristics at an angle of attack of 0 degrees. The testing occurred at a variety of Mach numbers, mass-flow ratios, and Reynolds numbers. Information about the effect of afterbody length, basic data, and effect of cowl shape is provided.
Date: October 22, 1953
Creator: Sears, R. I.; Merlet, C. F. & Putland, L. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test of single-stage axial-flow fan (open access)

Test of single-stage axial-flow fan

"A single-stage axial fan was built and tested in the shop of the propeller-research tunnel of the NACA. The fan comprised a simple 24-blade rotor having a diameter of 21 inches and a solidity of 0.86 and a set of 37 contravanes having a solidity of 1.33. The rotor was driven by a 25-horsepower motor capable of rotating at a speed of 3600 r.p.m. The fan was tested for volume, pressure, and efficiency over a range of delivery pressures and volumes for a wide range of contravane and blade-angle settings" (p. 49).
Date: September 22, 1941
Creator: Bell, E. Barton
System: The UNT Digital Library
An investigation of the drag of windshields in the 8-foot high-speed wind tunnel (open access)

An investigation of the drag of windshields in the 8-foot high-speed wind tunnel

Report presents the results of tests made to determine the drag of closed-cockpit and transport-type windshields. The tests were made at speeds corresponding to a Mach number range of approximately 0.25 to 0.58 in the NACA 8-foot high-speed wind tunnel. This speed range corresponds to a test Reynolds number range of 2,510,000 to 4,830,000 based on the mean aerodynamic chord of the full-span model (17.29 in.). The shapes of the windshield proper, the hood, and the tail fairing were systematically varied to include common types and refined design.
Date: May 22, 1939
Creator: Robinson, Russell G. & Delano, James B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculated Effect of Uranium Distribution on Reflector Control Effectiveness for a Water-Moderated Power Reactor (open access)

Calculated Effect of Uranium Distribution on Reflector Control Effectiveness for a Water-Moderated Power Reactor

Report presenting two-group theory calculations to determine the effect of nonuniform uranium loading as compared to uniform loading on the reflector control effectiveness attainable in a large thermal reactor usable for aircraft power application. Results regarding reactivities and investments, uranium distributions, and power distributions are provided.
Date: January 22, 1954
Creator: Fox, Thomas A. & Valerino, Michael F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight and Preflight Evaluation of an Automatic Thrust-Coefficient Control System in a Twin-Engine Ram-Jet Missile (open access)

Flight and Preflight Evaluation of an Automatic Thrust-Coefficient Control System in a Twin-Engine Ram-Jet Missile

Report presenting a flight and preflight evaluation of an automatic thrust-coefficient control system in a twin-engine ram-jet missile. A flicker-type single-loop servocontrol system is shown to be a usable way of controlling ram-jet thrust coefficients.
Date: January 22, 1954
Creator: Dettwyler, H. Rudolph & Trout, Otto F., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanical design analysis of several noncritical air-cooled turbine disks and a corrugated-insert air-cooled turbine rotor blade (open access)

Mechanical design analysis of several noncritical air-cooled turbine disks and a corrugated-insert air-cooled turbine rotor blade

Report presenting a series of turbine wheel designs made for a turbojet engine with an axial-flow compressor. The designs were made to determine the influence of air-cooling on overall engine design, weight, critical-material content, and complexity and to assist with construction of research model full-scale turbines.
Date: July 22, 1953
Creator: Moseson, Merland L.; Krasner, Morton H. & Ziemer, Robert R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some theoretical low-speed span loading characteristics of swept wings in roll and sideslip (open access)

Some theoretical low-speed span loading characteristics of swept wings in roll and sideslip

The Weissinger method for determining additional span loading for incompressible flow is used to find the damping in roll, the lateral center of pressure of the rolling for wing plan forms of various aspect ratios, taper ratios, and sweep angles. In addition, the applicability of the method to the determination of certain other aerodynamic derivatives is investigated, and corrections for the first-order effects of compressibility are indicated. The agreement obtained between experimentally and theoretically determined values for the aerodynamic coefficients indicates that the method of Weissinger is well suited to the calculation of such resulting aerodynamic derivatives of wings as do not involve considerations of tip suction.
Date: December 22, 1948
Creator: Bird, John D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The application of Green's theorem to the solution of boundary-value problems in linearized supersonic wing theory (open access)

The application of Green's theorem to the solution of boundary-value problems in linearized supersonic wing theory

From Introduction: "The present paper is restricted to a discussion of wing theory subject to the assumptions of linearized compressible flow. It therefore employs solutions of Laplace's equation and the wave equation for cases where the boundary condition are specified in the plane of the wing."
Date: December 22, 1948
Creator: Heaslet, Max A. & Lomax, Harvard
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effect of nacelle combinations and size on the zero-lift drag of a 45 degree sweptback wing and body configuration as determined by free-flight tests at Mach numbers between 0.8 and 1.3 (open access)

The effect of nacelle combinations and size on the zero-lift drag of a 45 degree sweptback wing and body configuration as determined by free-flight tests at Mach numbers between 0.8 and 1.3

Investigation of the effect on zero-lift drag of varying the size and number of symmetrically mounted nacelles on a 45 degree sweptback wing and body combination as determined by free-flight tests of rocket-propelled models over a range of Mach and Reynolds numbers. The nacelle configuration consisted of a twin-engine nacelle near the fuselage, a combination of single-engine nacelles at the wing tip and fuselage, a large nacelle at the wing tip, and a large nacelle near the fuselage.
Date: June 22, 1953
Creator: Hoffman, Sherwood & Pepper, William B., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effect of initial rate of subsonic diffusion on the stable subcritical mass-flow range of a conical shock diffuser (open access)

The effect of initial rate of subsonic diffusion on the stable subcritical mass-flow range of a conical shock diffuser

Report presenting results of a systematic study in the 8- by 6-foot supersonic wind tunnel to determine the effect that area distribution in the subsonic diffuser might have on stability and overall performance of conical-type supersonic diffusers. Drag, pressure recovery, and mass flow are presented for five diffusers designed for maximum mass flow at Mach number 2.0.
Date: July 22, 1953
Creator: Nettles, J. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-altitude performance of 9.5-inch-diameter tubular experimental combustor with fuel staging (open access)

High-altitude performance of 9.5-inch-diameter tubular experimental combustor with fuel staging

Report presenting an investigation of 57 experimental tubular designs embodying adjacent fuel-rich and air-rich regions and axial staging of the fuel introduction at simulated high-altitude conditions. Results regarding the development of pilot, development of secondary-air admission sleeve, development of final configuration, and performance of best configuration are provided.
Date: March 22, 1954
Creator: Scull, Wilfred E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamic Stability and Control Characteristics of a Ducted-Fan Model in Hovering Flight (open access)

Dynamic Stability and Control Characteristics of a Ducted-Fan Model in Hovering Flight

Report presenting the results of an experimental investigation of the dynamic stability and control of a simple ducted-fan model in hovering flight in order to provide basic information on the stability and control of jet vertically rising airplanes in hovering flight. The investigation primarily consisted of flight tests with the model hovering at altitude and near the ground.
Date: April 22, 1954
Creator: Kirby, Robert H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight investigation of the effect of control centering springs on the apparent spiral stability of a personal-owner airplane (open access)

Flight investigation of the effect of control centering springs on the apparent spiral stability of a personal-owner airplane

Report presents the results of a flight investigation conducted on a typical high-wing personal-owner airplane to determine the effect of control centering springs on apparent spiral stability. Apparent spiral stability is the term used to describe the spiraling tendencies of an airplane in uncontrolled flight as affected both by the true spiral stability of the perfectly trimmed airplane and by out-of-trim control settings. Centering springs were used in both the aileron and rudder control systems to provide both a positive centering action and a means of trimming the airplane.
Date: March 22, 1951
Creator: Campbell, John P.; Hunter, Paul A.; Hewes, Donald E. & Whitten, James B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical symmetric span loading due to flap deflection for wings of arbitrary plan form at subsonic speeds (open access)

Theoretical symmetric span loading due to flap deflection for wings of arbitrary plan form at subsonic speeds

From Summary: "A simplified lifting-surface theory is applied to the problem of evaluating span loading due to flap deflection for arbitrary wing plan forms. With the resulting procedure, the effects of flap deflection on the span loading and associated aerodynamic characteristics can be easily computed for any wing which is symmetrical about the root chord and which has a straight quarter-chord line over the wing semispan. The effects of compressibility and spanwise variation of section lift-curve slope are taken into account by the procedure. The method presented can also be used to calculate the downwash in the vertical center of the wake of a wing which has arbitrary spanwise loading."
Date: September 22, 1950
Creator: DeYoung, John
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical antisymmetric span loading for wings of arbitrary plan form at subsonic speeds (open access)

Theoretical antisymmetric span loading for wings of arbitrary plan form at subsonic speeds

A simplified lifting-surface theory that includes effects of compressibility and spanwise variation of section lift-curve slope is used to provide charts with which antisymmetric loading due to arbitrary antisymmetric angle of attack can be found for wings having symmetric plan forms with a constant spanwise sweep angle of the quarter-chord line. Consideration is given to the flexible wing in roll. Aerodynamic characteristics due to rolling, deflected ailerons, and sideslip of wings with dihedral are considered. Solutions are presented for straight-tapered wings for a range of swept plan forms.
Date: December 22, 1949
Creator: DeYoung, John
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Effects of Propulsive Jets and Afterbody Configurations on the Zero-Lift Drag of Bodies of Revolution at a Mach Number of 1.59 (open access)

Experimental Effects of Propulsive Jets and Afterbody Configurations on the Zero-Lift Drag of Bodies of Revolution at a Mach Number of 1.59

The present investigation was made at a free-stream Mach number of 1.59 to compare the afterbody drags to a series of conical boattailed models at zero angle of attack. Afterbody drags were obtained for both the power-off and the power-on conditions. Power-on drags were obtained as a function of afterbody fineness ratio, jet pressure ratio and divergence, and jet Mach number.
Date: April 22, 1954
Creator: de Moraes, Carlos A. & Nowitzky, Albin M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Simplified Method for Approximating the Transient Motion in Angles of Attack and Sideslip During a Constant Rolling Maneuver (open access)

A Simplified Method for Approximating the Transient Motion in Angles of Attack and Sideslip During a Constant Rolling Maneuver

"The transient motion in angles of attack and sideslip during a constant rolling maneuver has been analyzed. Simplified expressions are presented for the determination of the pertinent modes of motion as well as the modal coefficient corresponding to each mode. Calculations made with and without the derivatives for side force due to sideslip and lift-curve slope indicate that although these derivatives increase the total damping of the system they do not markedly affect the transient motion" (p. 131).
Date: May 22, 1956
Creator: Sternfield, Leonard
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Analysis of Pressure Studies and Experimental and Theoretical Downwash and Sidewash Behind Five Pointed-Tip Wings at Supersonic Speeds (open access)

An Analysis of Pressure Studies and Experimental and Theoretical Downwash and Sidewash Behind Five Pointed-Tip Wings at Supersonic Speeds

"Flow-angle and pressure surveys behind five, thin, pointed-tip wings of varying plan form have been made at Mach numbers 1.62 and 2.41. Schlieren studies at a Mach number 1.93 for the same five plan-form wings were made to illustrate the behavior of the vortex sheet. The surveys were conducted at 1.5, 3, and 4 root chords behind three triangular wings of 50 degree, 63 degree, and 72 degree leading-edge sweep angle, and behind the 50 degree triangular wing reversed" (p. 1067).
Date: January 22, 1954
Creator: Boatright, William B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full-Scale Investigation of Several Jet-Engine Noise-Reduction Nozzles (open access)

Full-Scale Investigation of Several Jet-Engine Noise-Reduction Nozzles

"A number of noise-suppression nozzles were tested on full-scale engines. In general, these nozzles achieved noise reduction by the mixing interference of adjacent jets, that is, by using multiple-slot-nozzles. Several of the nozzles achieved reductions in sound power of approximately 5 decibels (nearly 70 percent) with small thrust losses (approx. 1 percent). The maximum sound-pressure level was reduced by as much as 18 decibels in particular frequency bands" (p. 1249).
Date: January 22, 1957
Creator: Coles, Willard D. & Callaghan, Edmund E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the NACA 4-(3)(8)-045 Two-Blade Propellers at Forward Mach Numbers to 0.725 to Determine the Effects of Compressibility and Solidity on Performance (open access)

Investigation of the NACA 4-(3)(8)-045 Two-Blade Propellers at Forward Mach Numbers to 0.725 to Determine the Effects of Compressibility and Solidity on Performance

From Summary: "As part of a general investigation of propellers at high forward speeds, tests of two 2-blade propellers having the NACA 4-(3)(8)-03 and NACA 4-(3)(8)-45 blade designs have been made in the Langley 8-foot high-speed tunnel through a range of blade angle from 20 degrees to 60 degrees for forward Mach numbers from 0.165 to 0.725 to establish in detail the changes in propeller characteristics due to compressibility effects. These propellers differed primarily only in blade solidity, one propeller having 50 percent and more solidity than the other. Serious losses in propeller efficiency were found as the propeller tip Mach number exceeded 0.91, irrespective of forward speed or blade angle."
Date: January 22, 1944
Creator: Stack, John; Draley, Eugene C.; Delano, James B. & Feldman, Lewis
System: The UNT Digital Library
The change with mass-flow ratio of the cowl pressure drag of normal-shock inlets at supersonic speeds (open access)

The change with mass-flow ratio of the cowl pressure drag of normal-shock inlets at supersonic speeds

Report presenting pressure-drag coefficients and the changes in these coefficients with mass-flow ratio, which have been measured in tests of six open-nose conical cowls at an angle of attack of 0 degrees. Testing occurred in the Ames 8 by 8-inch supersonic wind tunnel at a range of Mach numbers. Results regarding pressure distributions, change in cowl pressure drag with mass-flow ratio, cowl pressure drag at a given mass-flow ratio, and changes in cowl pressure drag with mass-flow ratio as a function of Mach number are provided.
Date: June 22, 1956
Creator: Davis, Wallace F. & Gowen, Forrest E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Free-flight measurements of the zero-lift drag of several wings at Mach numbers from 1.4 to 3.8 (open access)

Free-flight measurements of the zero-lift drag of several wings at Mach numbers from 1.4 to 3.8

Report presenting the zero-lift drag of several wings obtained at supersonic Mach numbers in free flight with rocket-propelled models. The wings tested all had the same exposed area, mounted on the same basic body configuration, and had one of four different types of wings.
Date: June 22, 1956
Creator: Jackson, H. Herbert
System: The UNT Digital Library