China has moved a step closer to creating a
supersonic submarine that could travel from Shanghai to San Francisco in less
than two hours.
New technology developed by a team of scientists at
Harbin Institute of Technology's Complex Flow and Heat Transfer Lab has made it
easier for a submarine, or torpedo, to travel at extremely high speeds
underwater.
Li Fengchen, professor of fluid machinery and
engineering, said the team's innovative approach meant they could now create
the complicated air "bubble" required for rapid underwater travel. Water
produces more friction, or drag, on an object than air, which means
conventional submarines cannot travel as fast as an aircraft.
However, during the cold war, the Soviet military
developed a technology called supercavitation, which involves enveloping a
submerged vessel inside an air bubble to avoid problems caused by water drag.
A Soviet supercavitation torpedo called Shakval was
able to reach a speed of 370km/h or more - much faster than any other
conventional torpedoes.
In theory, a supercavitating vessel could reach the
speed of sound underwater, or about 5,800km/h, which would reduce the journey
time for a transatlantic underwater cruise to less than an hour, and for a
transpacific journey to about 100 minutes, according to a report by California
Institute of Technology in 2001.
However, supercavitation technology has faced two
major problems. First, the submerged vessel has needed to be launched at high
speeds, approaching 100km/h, to generate and maintain the air bubble.
Second, it is extremely difficult - if not impossible
- to steer the vessel using conventional mechanisms, such as a rudder, which
are inside the bubble without any direct contact with water.
As a result, its application has been limited to
unmanned vessels, such as torpedoes, but nearly all of these torpedoes were
fired in a straight line because they had limited ability to turn.
Li said the team of Chinese scientists had found an
innovative means of addressing both problems.
Once in the water, the team's supercavitation
vessel would constantly "shower" a special liquid membrane on its own
surface. Although this membrane would be worn off by water, in the meantime it
could significantly reduce the water drag on the vessel at low speed.
After its speed had reached 75km/h or more the
vessel would enter the supercavitation state. The man-made liquid membrane on
the vessel surface could help with steering because, with precise control,
different levels of friction could be created on different parts of the vessel.
"Our method is different from any other
approach, such as vector propulsion," or thrust created by an engine, Li
said. "By combining liquid-membrane technology with supercavitation, we
can significantly reduce the launch challenges and make cruising control
easier."
However, Li said many problems still needed to be
solved before supersonic submarine travel became feasible. Besides the control
issue, a powerful underwater rocket engine still had to be developed to give
the vessel a longer range. The effective range of the Russian supercavitation
torpedoes, for example, was only between 11 km and 15 km.
Li said the supercavitation technology was not
limited only to military use. In future, it could benefit civilian underwater
transport, or water sports such as swimming.
"If a swimsuit can create and hold many tiny
bubbles in water, it can significantly reduce the water drag; swimming in water
could be as effortless as flying in the sky," he said.
Besides Russia, countries such as Germany, Iran and
the United States have been developing vessels or weapons using supercavitation
technology.
Professor Wang Guoyu, the head of the Fluid
Mechanics Laboratory at Beijing Institute of Technology who is leading another
state-funded research project on supercavitation, said the global research
community had been troubled for decades by the lack of innovative ideas to
address the huge scientific and engineering challenges.
"The size of the bubble is difficult to
control, and the vessel is almost impossible to steer," he said. While
cruising at high speed during supercavitation, a fin could be snapped off if it
touched the water because of the liquid's far greater density.
Despite many scientists worldwide working on
similar projects, the latest progress remains unclear because they are regarded
as military secrets.
Wang, a member of the water armament committee of
the China Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, said even he had
been kept in the dark about recent supercavitation developments in China.
"The primary drive still comes from the
military, so most research projects are shrouded in secrecy," he said.
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