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  2. Jet fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jet_fuel

    Max adiabatic burn temperature 2,230 °C (4,050 °F) open air burn temperature: 1,030 °C (1,890 °F) [14] [15] [16] ... Jet fuel contains more sulfur, up to 1,000 ...

  3. Jet fire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jet_fire

    A jet fire is a high temperature flame of burning fuel released under pressure in a particular orientation. The material burned is a continuous stream of flammable gas, liquid or a two-phase mixture. A jet fire is a significant hazard in process and storage plants which handle or keep flammable fluids under pressure.

  4. Jet engine performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jet_engine_performance

    Jet engines perform in two basic ways, the combined effect of which determines how much waste they produce as a byproduct of burning fuel to do thrust work on an aircraft. [5] First is an energy conversion as burning fuel speeds up the air passing through which at the same time produces waste heat from component losses (thermal efficiency ...

  5. JP-4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JP-4

    It was the primary U.S. Air Force jet fuel between 1951 and 1995. ... (−60 °C), and its maximum burning temperature was 6,670 °F (3,688 °C). [citation needed]

  6. Aviation fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aviation_fuel

    Jet fuel is a gas turbine fuel used in propeller and jet fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters. It has a low viscosity at low temperature, has limited ranges of density and calorific value, burns cleanly, and remains chemically stable when heated to high temperature. [15]

  7. Afterburner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afterburner

    A jet engine afterburner is an extended exhaust section containing extra fuel injectors. Since the jet engine upstream (i.e., before the turbine) will use little of the oxygen it ingests, additional fuel can be burned after the gas flow has left the turbines. When the afterburner is turned on, fuel is injected and igniters are fired.

  8. Poop-powered planes: Could jet fuel made from sewage take off?

    www.aol.com/poop-powered-planes-could-jet...

    That absorbed CO2 is released back into the atmosphere when the SAF burns, whereas burning jet fuel made from fossil fuels emits carbon that has been locked away. So far, sewage has been an ...

  9. Flash point - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_point

    A diesel-fueled engine has no ignition source (such as the spark plugs in a gasoline engine), so diesel fuel can have a high flash point, but must have a low autoignition temperature. Jet fuel flash points also vary with the composition of the fuel. Both Jet A and Jet A-1 have flash points between 38 and 66 °C (100 and 151 °F), close to that ...