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Submarine - Submarine propulsion

Submarine - Submarine propulsion: Encyclopedia II - Submarine - Submarine propulsion

Until the advent of nuclear marine propulsion, most 20th century submarines used batteries for running underwater and gasoline (petrol) or diesel engines on the surface and to recharge the batteries. Early boats used gasoline but this quickly gave way to paraffin, then diesel, because of reduced flammability. Diesel-electric became the standard means of propulsion. Initially the diesel or gasoline engine and the electric motor were on the same shaft which also drove a propeller with clutches between each of them. This allowed the engine to d ...

See also:

Submarine, Submarine - Non-military submarines and submersibles, Submarine - Submersibles, Submarine - Military submarines, Submarine - Types of military submarines, Submarine - History of submarines, Submarine - Early history of submarines and the first submersibles, Submarine - The first military submarines, Submarine - Submarines in the American Civil War, Submarine - Mechanically-powered submarines late 1800s, Submarine - Late 1800s to World War I, Submarine - Submarines during World War I, Submarine - Interwar developments, Submarine - Submarines during World War II, Submarine - Modern submarines, Submarine - Major submarine incidents since 2000, Submarine - Submarine propulsion, Submarine - Submarine movies, Submarine - Notes, Submarine - General, Submarine - Articles on specific vessels, Submarine - Articles on specific submarine classes, Submarine - Patents

Submarine, Submarine - Articles on specific submarine classes, Submarine - Articles on specific vessels, Submarine - Early history of submarines and the first submersibles, Submarine - General, Submarine - History of submarines, Submarine - Interwar developments, Submarine - Late 1800s to World War I, Submarine - Major submarine incidents since 2000, Submarine - Mechanically-powered submarines late 1800s, Submarine - Military submarines, Submarine - Modern submarines, Submarine - Non-military submarines and submersibles, Submarine - Notes, Submarine - Patents, Submarine - Submarine movies, Submarine - Submarine propulsion, Submarine - Submarines during World War I, Submarine - Submarines during World War II, Submarine - Submarines in the American Civil War, Submarine - Submersibles, Submarine - The first military submarines, Submarine - Types of military submarines, AS-28 Russian Rescue Submarine Saved, Submarines in the United States Navy, Submarine cable, Timeline of underwater technology, Midget submarine, Submersible, Semi-submersible, Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle, Autonomous Underwater Vehicle, Modern Naval tactics, Communication with submarines, Submarine sandwich, named for its submarine-like shape, Submarine simulator, a computer game genre, List of submarine actions, List of sunken nuclear submarines, Depth charge and Depth charge (cocktail), Nuclear navy, List of countries with submarines

Submarine: Encyclopedia II - Submarine - Submarine propulsion



Submarine - Submarine propulsion

Until the advent of nuclear marine propulsion, most 20th century submarines used batteries for running underwater and gasoline (petrol) or diesel engines on the surface and to recharge the batteries. Early boats used gasoline but this quickly gave way to paraffin, then diesel, because of reduced flammability. Diesel-electric became the standard means of propulsion. Initially the diesel or gasoline engine and the electric motor were on the same shaft which also drove a propeller with clutches between each of them. This allowed the engine to drive the electric motor as a generator to recharge the batteries and also propel the submarine if required. The clutch between the motor and the engine would be disengaged when the boat dived so that the motor could be used to turn the propeller. The motor could have more than one armature on the shaft — these would be electrically coupled in series for slow speed and parallel for high speed (known as "group down" and "group up" respectively).

In the 1930s the principle was modified for some submarine designs, particularly those of the U.S. Navy and the British U-class. The engine was no longer attached to the motor/propeller drive shaft but drove a separate generator which would drive the motors on the surface and/or recharge the batteries. This diesel-electric propulsion allowed much more flexibility, for example the submarine could travel slowly whilst the engines were running at full power to recharge the batteries as quickly as possible, reducing time on the surface, or use its snorkel. Also it was now possible to insulate the noisy diesel engines from the pressure hull making the submarine quieter.

There were other power sources attempted—oil-fired steam turbines powered the British "K" class submarines built during the First World War and in following years but these were not very successful. This was selected to give them the necessary surface speed to keep up with the British battle fleet.

Steam power was resurrected in the 1950s with the advent of the nuclear-powered steam turbine driving a generator which is now used in all large submarines. By removing the requirement for atmospheric oxygen these submarines can stay submerged indefinitely so long as food supplies remain (air is recycled and fresh water distilled from seawater). These vessels always have a small battery and diesel engine/generator installation for emergency use when the reactor have to be shut down.

Anaerobic propulsion was employed by the first mechanically driven submarine Ictineo II in 1864. Ictineo's engine used a chemical mix containing a peroxide compound, that generated heat for steam propulsion while at the same time solved the problem of oxygen renovation in an hermetic container for breathing purposes. The system wasn't employed again until 1940 when the German Navy tested a system employing the same principles, the Walter turbine, on the experimental V-80 submarine and later on the naval U-791 submarine. At the end of the Second World War the British and Russians experimented with hydrogen peroxide/kerosene (paraffin) engines which could be used both above and below the surface. The results were not encouraging enough for this technique to be adopted at the time, although the Russians deployed a class of submarines with this engine type code named Quebec by NATO, they were considered a failure. Today several navies, notably Sweden now use air-independent propulsion boats which substitute liquid oxygen for hydrogen peroxide.

The German Type 212 submarine uses nine 34-kilowatt hydrogen fuel cell as air-independent propulsion, which makes it first series production submarine using fuel cell.

Most small modern commercial submarines which are not expected to operate independently use batteries which can be recharged by a mother-ship after every dive.

Towards the end of the 20th century, some submarines began to be fitted with pump-jet propulsors instead of propellers. Although these are heavier, more expensive, and often less efficient than a propeller, they are significantly quieter, giving an important tactical advantage.

A possible propulsion system for submarines is the magnetohydrodynamic drive, or "caterpillar drive", which has no moving parts. It was popularized in the movie version of The Hunt for Red October, written by Tom Clancy, which portrayed it as a virtually silent system. (In the book, a form of propulsor was used rather than an MHD.) Although some experimental surface ships have been built with this propulsion system, speeds have not been as high as those hoped. In addition, the noise created by bubbles, and the higher power settings a submarine's reactor would need, mean that it is unlikely to be considered for any military purpose.

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Holland, John Philip Holland, John Wilkins, Jules Verne, K-19: The Widowmaker, Kaiko, Kairyu, Kaiten, Ko-hyoteki, Kosovo War, Lake Pontchartrain, List of NATO reporting names for ballistic missile submarines, List of Soviet and Russian submarine classes, List of Soviet submarines, List of U-boats, List of United States submarine classes, List of countries with submarines, List of submarine actions, List of submarine classes, List of submarine classes of the Royal Navy, List of submarines of the Royal Navy, List of submarines of the United States Navy, List of sunken nuclear submarines, Major submarine incidents since 2000, Midget submarine, Modern Naval tactics, Mutual Assured Destruction, Narcís Monturiol, Nautilus, New York, Nuclear navy, Nuclear powered, ORP Orzeł, PNS Ghazi, Pearl Harbor, People's Liberation Army Navy, People's Republic of China, Plongeur, Quebec, Resurgam, Robert Fulton, Royal Navy, Russia, Russian, SSBN-730, SSBNs, Second Battle of the Atlantic, Second World War, Semi-submersible, Sentaka I-200, Sentoku I-400, September 7, Ships named Nautilus, South Asian, Soviet Navy, Soviet Union, Spanish Navy, Stirling engines, Submarine aircraft carriers, Submarine cable, Submarine film, Submarine patent, Submarine sandwich, Submarine simulator, Submarines in the United States Navy, Submersible, Sweden, Thames, The Enemy Below, The Hunt for Red October, Timeline of underwater technology, Titanic, Tom Clancy, Tomahawk, Tourist, Treaty of Versailles, Trident, Trident II, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, Type 212 submarine, Type 95, Typhoon class, U-571 (film), U-Boat, U-boats, U.S. Navy, US Navy, USS Housatonic, USS Nautilus, USS Thresher, USS Triton, USS Holland, Ukrainian, Ultra, United Kingdom, United States, United States Navy, United States of America, Vesikko, Victor III, Waikiki beach, Walter, War of 1812, Winston Churchill, World War I, World War II, abbreviation, air-independent propulsion, aircraft carriers, bathyscaphe, bathysphere, batteries, battery, battery-powered, battleships, boats, capital ships, cigar, cities, conning tower, crew, cruise missiles, cruiser, destroyers, deterrence, diesel, diesel-electric, dispute, distilled, diving bell, diving gear, drag, electric, electrolysis, electronic warfare, first strike, flotsam, force de frappe, freshwater, fuel cell, fuel cells, gasoline, global positioning system, hermetic, hull, hunter-killer, hunter-killers, hydrogen peroxide, inertial guidance system, infiltration, insulate, keel, kerosene, kt, liquid oxygen, magnetohydrodynamic drive, manganese, marine, merchant shipping, midget submarines, missile silos, navies, nuclear marine propulsion, nuclear missiles, nuclear power, nuclear warheads, nuclear-powered, oxygen, periscope, peroxide, petroleum, plane, portholes, potassium chlorate, prisms, psi, pump-jet, radar, radio, radio silence, reconnaissance, reefs, riverboat, schnorchel, schooner, science, science fiction, screws, sea floor, ships, slang, smell, snorkel, sonar, sound, steam, submarine tender, submarine-launched ballistic missiles, submersibles, tactics, tender, the island of O'ahu, torpedoes, treadwheel, tube, turbine, underwater, universities, vertical launch tubes, watercraft, whales, wolf packs, zinc



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Submarine propulsion", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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