Aircraft Propulsion-2
Aircraft Propulsion-2
Aircraft Propulsion-2
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Work can be extracted from a gas at a higher inlet pressure to the lower back pressure by allowing it to flow through a turbine. In a turbine as the gas passes through, it expands. The work done by the gas is equivalent to the change of its enthalpy. It is a well known fact that the turbines operate on the momentum principle. Part of the energy of the gas during expansion is converted into kinetic energy in the flow nozzles. The gas leaves these stationary nozzles at a relatively higher velocity. Then it is made to impinge on the blades over the turbine rotor or wheel. Momentum imparted to the blades turns the wheel. Thus, the two primary parts of the turbine are, (i) The stator nozzles, and (ii) the turbine rotor blades. Normally a turbine stage is classified as (i) an impulsion stage, and (ii) a reaction stage An impulse stage is characterized by the expansion of the gas which occurs only in the stator nozzles. The rotor blades act as directional vanes to deflect the direction of the flow. Further, they convert the kinetic energy of the gas into work by changing the momentum of the gas more or less at constant pressure. A reaction stage is one in which expansion of the gas takes place both in the stator and in the rotor. The function of the stator is the same as that in the impulse stage, but the function in the rotor is two fold. (i) the rotor converts the kinetic energy of the gas into work, and (ii) contributes a reaction force on the rotor blades. The reaction force is due to the increase in the velocity of the gas relative to the blades. This results from the expansion of the gas during its passage through the rotor.
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Hence, the chances are greater for separation due to boundary layer growth on the blade surface. Due to this, the rotor blade passages of the impulse machine suffer greater losses giving lower stage efficiencies. The paddle wheel, Pelton wheel and Curtis stem turbine are some examples of impulse machines.
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The degree of reaction of a turbomachine stage may be defined as the ratio of the static or pressure head change occurring in the rotor to the total change across the stage. Note: Axial-flow turbine with 50% reaction have symmetrical blades in their rotor and stators. It may be noted that the velocity triangles at the entry and exit of a 50% reaction stage are also symmetrical.
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This simple relation is frequently used and is very useful in drawing the velocity triangles for turbomachines.
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The notation used here to draw velocity triangles correspond to the x-y coordinates; the suffix (a or ) identifies components in the axial direction and suffix (t) refers to tangential direction. Air angles in the absolute system are denoted by alpha (), where as those in the relative system are represented by beta ().
Since the stage is axial, the change in the mean diameter between its entry and exit can be neglected. Therefore, the peripheral or tangential velocity (u) remains constant in the velocity triangles. It can be proved from the geometry that ct2 + ct3 = wt2 + wt3 It is often assumed that the axial velocity component remains constant through the stage. For such condition, ca = ca1 = ca2 = ca3
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For constant axial velocity yields a useful relation, tan 2 + tan 3 = tan 2 + tan 3
ct 2 ct 3 W = u + u u
2
c The first term t 2 in the bracket depends on the nozzle or fixed angle (2) and the ratio u
u c . The contribution of the second term t 3 to the work is generally small. It is also c2 u observed that the kinetic energy of the fluid leaving the stage is greater for larger values of ct3. The leaving loss from the stage is minimum when ct3 = 0, i.e., when the discharge from the stage is axial (c3 = ca3). However, this condition gives lesser stage work as can be seen from the above two equations.
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W = 2 u c = a u
Since the work, W in the above equation is frequently referred to as the blade or stage work, the coefficient, would also be known as the blade or stage loading coefficient. For constant axial velocity (ca), it can be shown that = (tan 2 + tan 3) = (tan 2 + tan 3) The plots are useful in comparing the performances of various stages of different sizes and geometries.
1 2 2 1 2 1 3 2 2 c 2 c3 + u 2 u 3 + w3 w2 2 2 2
The energy supplied to the rotor blades is the absolute kinetic energy in the jet at the entry plus the kinetic energy change within the rotor blades.
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Erb =
1 2 1 2 1 3 2 2 c2 + w3 w2 + u2 u3 2 2 2
= b =
(c
2 2
2 2 2 c3 + w3 w2 2 2 2 c2 + w3 w2
) ( (
u (ct 2 + ct 3 ) = 1 2 c2 2
After rearranging the terms, we have
b = = 4 ( sin 2 2 )
This shows that the utilization factor is a function of the blade-to-gas speed ratio and the nozzle angle.
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The above Figures show the velocity triangles for one axial flow turbine stage and the nomenclature employed. The gas enters the row of nozzle blades (These are also known as 'stator blades' and 'nozzle guide vanes') with a static pressure and temperature, P1, T1 and a velocity C1 is expanded to P2,T2 and leaves with an increased velocity C2 at an angle 2. The rotor blade inlet angle will be chosen to suit the direction 2 of the gas velocity V2 relative to the blade at inlet. 2and V2 are found by vectorial subtraction of the blade speed U from the absolute velocity C2. After being deflected, and usually further expanded, in the rotor blade passages, the gas leaves at P3, T3 with relative velocity V3 at angle 3. Vectorial addition of U yields the magnitude and direction of the gas velocity at exit from the stage, C3 and 3. 3 is known as the swirl angle.
dimensional effects.
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Vortex theory
It was pointed out earlier that the shape of the velocity triangles must vary from root to tip of the blade because the blade speed U increases with radius. Another reason is that the whirl component in the flow at outlet from the nozzles causes the static pressure and temperature to vary across the annulus. With a uniform pressure at inlet, or at least with a much smaller variation because the whirl component is smaller, it is clear that the pressure drop across the nozzle will vary giving rise to a corresponding variation in efflux velocity C2. Twisted blading designed to take account of the changing gas angles is called vortex blading. It has been common steam turbine practice, except in low-pressure blading where the blades are very long, to design on conditions at the mean diameter, keep the blade angles constant from root to tip, and assume that no additional loss is incurred by the variation in incidence along the blade caused by the changing gas angles. Comparative tests have been conducted by the earlier researchers on a single-stage gas turbine of radius ratio 1-37, using in turn blades of constant angle and vortex blading. The results showed that any improvement in efficiency obtained with vortex blading was within the margin of experimental error. This contrasts with similar tests on a 6-stage axial compressor, by another researcher, which showed a distinct improvement from the use of vortex blading. This was, however, not so
much an improvement in efficiency (of about 1-5 per cent) as in the delay of the onset of surging which of course does not arise in accelerating flow. It appears, therefore, that steam turbine designers have been correct in not applying vortex theory except when absolutely necessary at the LP end. They have to consider the additional cost of twisted blades for the very large number of rows of blading required, and they know that the Rankine cycle is relatively insensitive to component losses. Conversely, it is not surprising that the gas turbine designer, struggling to achieve the highest possible component efficiency, has consistently used some form of vortex blading which it is felt intuitively must give a better performance however small. Vortex theory has been outlined earlier by Cohen and others where it was shown that if the elements of fluid are to be in radial equilibrium, an increase in static pressure from root to tip is necessary whenever there is a whirl component of velocity. Figure 7.8 shows (see below) why the gas turbine designer cannot talk of impulse or 50 per cent reaction stages. The proportion of the stage pressure or temperature drop which occurs in the rotor must increase from root to tip. Although Fig. 7.8 refers to a single-stage turbine with axial inlet velocity and no swirl at outlet, the whirl component at inlet and outlet of a repeating stage will be small compared with CW2- the reaction will therefore still increase from root to tip, if somewhat less markedly.
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(b)
(c)
(d)
The profile loss coefficient Yp is measured directly in cascade tests similar to those described for compressor blading. Losses (b) and (c) cannot easily be separated, and they are accounted for by a secondary loss coefficient Ys.
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The tip clearance loss coefficient, which normally arises only for rotor blades, will be denoted by Yk. Thus the total loss coefficient Y comprises the accurately measured two-dimensional loss Yp, plus the three-dimensional loss (Ys+Yk) which must be deduced from turbine stage test results. All that is necessary for our present purpose for finding the choice of blade profile is limited to the knowledge of the sources of loss.
Figure 7.11 shows a conventional steam turbine blade profile constructed from circular arcs and straight lines. Gas turbines have until recently used profiles closely resembling this, although specified by aerofoil terminology.
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Note that the blade profile will be completely determined when (a) the pitch/width ratio (s/w) is established, and (b) both the camber line angle ' and blade thickness/pitch ratio have been calculated for various values of x between 0 and 1.
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Turbine Performance
The performance of turbine is limited principally by two factors: compressibility and stress. Compressibility limits the mass flow that can pass through a given turbine and, stress limits the wheel speed U. The work per stage depends on the square of the wheel speed. However, the performance of the engine depends very strongly on the maximum temperature. Of course, as the maximum temperature increases, the allowable stress level diminishes; hence in the design of the engine there must be a compromise between maximum temperature and maximum rotor tip speed U. For given pressure ratio and adiabatic efficiency, the turbine work per unit mass is proportional to the inlet stagnation temperature. Since, in addition, the turbine work in a jet or turboshaft engine is commonly two or three times the useful energy output of the engine, a 1% increase in turbine inlet temperature can produce a 2% or 3% increase in engine output. This considerable advantage has supplied the incentive for the adoption of fairly elaborate methods for cooling the turbine nozzle and rotor blades.
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Figure 7.29 illustrates the methods of blade cooling that have received serious attention and research effort. Apart from the use of spray cooling for thrust boosting in turbojet engines, the liquid systems have not proved to be practicable. There are difficulties associated with
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channelling the liquid to and from the bladeswhether as primary coolant for forced convection or free convection open thermosyphon systems, or as secondary coolant for closed thermosyphon systems. It is impossible to eliminate corrosion or the formation of deposits in open systems, and very difficult to provide adequate secondary surface cooling area at the base of the blades for closed systems. The only method used successfully in production engines has been internal, forced convection, air cooling. With 1-5-2 per cent of the air mass flow used for cooling per blade row, the blade temperature can be reduced by between 200 and 300 C. Using current alloys, this permits turbine inlet temperatures of more than 1650 to be used. The blades are either cast, using cores to form the cooling passages, or forged with holes of any desired shape produced by electrochemical or laser drilling.
Figure 7.30 shows the type of turbine rotor blade introduced in the 1980s. The next step forward is likely to be achieved by transpiration cooling, where the cooling air is forced through a porous blade wall. This method is by far the most economical in cooling air, because not only does it remove heat from the wall more uniformly, but the effusing layer of air insulates the outer surface from the hot gas stream and so reduces the rate of heat transfer to the blade. Successful application awaits further development of suitable porous materials and techniques of blade manufacture. We are here speaking mainly of rotor blade cooling because this presents the most difficult problem. Nevertheless it should not be forgotten that, with high gas temperatures, oxidation becomes as significant a limiting factor as creep, and it is therefore equally important to cool even relatively unstressed components such as nozzle blades and annulus walls.
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Figure 7.31 (a) illustrates the principal features of nozzle blade cooling. The air is introduced in such a way as to provide jet impingement cooling of the inside surface of the very hot leading edge. The spent air leaves through slots or holes in the blade surface (to provide some film cooling) or in the trailing edge.
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Figure 7.35: Shows a typical temperature distribution at the mid-span of a blade designed to operate with Tg= 1500 and T = 320 .
It may be noted that the final design calculation for a cooled blade will involve an estimation of the two-dimensional temperature distribution over the blade cross-section at several values of l/L. Finite difference methods are used to solve the differential equations, and conduction within the blade is taken into account. Figure 7.35 shows a typical temperature distribution at the midspan of a blade designed to operate with Tg= 1500 and = 320 . It emphasizes one of the main problems of blade cooling, i.e. that of obtaining adequate cooling at the trailing edge. Finally, an estimation will be made of the thermal stresses incurred with due allowance for redistribution of stress by creep: with cooled blades the thermal stresses can dominate the gas bending stresses and be comparable with the centrifugal tensile stresses. Finally, mention must be made of an alternative approach to the high- temperature turbinethe use of ceramic materials which obviates the need for elaborate cooling passages. Much effort has been expended on the development of silicon nitride and silicon carbide materials for small turbine rotors (both axial and radial) in which it would be difficult to incorporate cooling passages. Adequate reliability and life are difficult to achieve, but demonstrator engines have been ran for short periods. Ceramic rotor blades are being investigated for use in stationary gas turbines for powers up to about 5 MW, and experimental trials are expected in the late 1990s. The use of ceramic turbines in production engines, however, remains an elusive goal three decades after optimistic forecasts about their introduction.
Blade Cooling
Blade cooling is the most effective way of maintaining high operating temperatures making use of the available material. Blade cooling may be classified based on the cooling site as external cooling and internal cooling. Another classification based on the cooling medium is liquid cooling and air cooling.
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External Cooling The external surface of the gas turbine blade is cooled by making use of compressed air from the compressor. Other methods of external cooling are film cooling and transpiration cooling. Internal Cooling Internal cooling of blades is achieved by passing air or liquid through internal cooling passages from hub towards the blade tip. The cooling of the blades is achieved by conduction and convection. Hollow blades can also be manufactured with a core and internal cooling passage. Based on the cooling medium employed, blade cooling may be classified into liquid cooling and air cooling.
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The designer will try to match turbine and compressor so that the compressor is operating near its peak efficiency through the entire range of operation, as shown in the below figure, where the operating line (i.e., the locus of stead-state matching condition) runs through the centers of the islands defined by the constant-efficiency lines.
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The essence of compressor-turbine matching is to find a speed at which the turbine will run delivering power to the compressor and permit excess power in the form of adequate jet pressure for expansion through the nozzle or additional turbine stages from which power can be derived to run a propeller or helicopter rotor as the case may be.
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Problems
In a single-stage impulse turbine the nozzle discharges the fluid on to the blades at an angle of 650 to the axial direction and the fluid leaves the blades with an absolute velocity of 300 m/s at an angle of 300 to the axial direction. If the blades have equal inlet and outlet angles and there is no axial thrust, estimate the blade angle, power produced per kg/s of the fluid and blade efficiency.
Solution:
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ca3 = ca2 = ca = ca3 x cos 3 = 300 x cos 30 = 259.8 m/s c2 = ca2/cos 2 = 259.8/cos 65 = 614.7 m/s u = ct2 wt2 = wt3 - ct3 c2 sin 2 - ca2 tan 2 = ca3 tan 3 c3 sin 3 Since ca2 = ca3 = ca and 2 = 3 = 2ca tan = c2 sin 2 + c3 sin 3 tan = (614.7 x sin 65 + 300 x sin 30) / 2 x 259.8 = 1.3609 = 53.7 0 2 = 3 = 53.7 0 u = c2 sin 2 - ca2 tan 2 = 614.7 x sin 65 259.8 x tan 53.7 = 203.43 m/s ct2 = c2 sin 2 = 614.7 x sin 65 = 557.1 m/s ct3 = c3 sin 3
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= 300 x sin 30 = 150 m/s WT = 203.43 x (557.1 + 150) x 10-3 = 144 kJ/kg = u/c2 = 203.43 / 614.7 = 0.33 Blade efficiency = 4 ( sin 2 - 2) = 4 x (0.33 x sin 65 0.332) = 0.761 = 76.1 %
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Uninstalled thrust of a jet engine (single inlet and single exhaust) is given by
Uninstalled thrust of a jet engine (single inlet and single exhaust) is given by
It is most desirable to expand the exhaust gas to the ambient pressure, which gives
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The installed thrust T is equal to the uninstalled thrust F minus the inlet drag Dinlet and minus nozzle drag Dnozzle , or T = F Dinlet - Dnozzle
Problem:
An advanced fighter engine operating at Mach 0.8 and 10 km altitude has the following unistalled performance data and uses a fuel with low heating value 42,800 kJ/kg: Uninstalled thrust = 50 kN Mass flow rate of air = 45 kg/sec Mass flow rate of fuel = 2.65 kg/sec Determine the specific thrust, thrust specific fuel consumption, exit velocity, thermal efficiency, propulsive efficiency, and overall efficiency (assume exit pressure equal to ambient pressure). Find the installed thrust when the total drag is equal to 10% of the uninstalled thrust.
Solution:
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Fs = 50/45 = 1.1111kN/(kg/sec) = 1111.1 m/s TSFC = 2.65 / 50 = 0.053 (kg/sec)/kN = 53 mg/N-sec V0 = Mo ao = 239. 6 m/sec
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Power output of the engine = 37.475 x 106 W Power input to the engine through fuel = 113.42 x 106 W Propulsive power or Thrust Power = 50,000 x 239.6 Thermal efficiency = 37.475 x 106 / 113.42 x 106 = 33.04 % Propulsive Efficiency = 50,000 x 239.6 / 37,475 x 106 = 31.97 % Overall efficiency = 50,000 x 239.6 / 113.42 x 106 = 10.56 % For additional numerical problems please refer the following books 1. Mathur, M., and Sharma, R.P., Gas Turbines and Jet and Rocket Propulsion, Standard Publishers, New Delhi, 1988. 2. Ganesan, V., Gas Turbines, Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing Company Limited, New Delhi. Second Edn. 2003. Additional reading 1. Hill, P.G. & Peterson, C.R. Mechanics & Thermodynamics of Propulsion Addison Wesley Longman INC, 1999. 2. Cohen, H., Rogers, G.F.C. and Saravanamuttoo, H.I.H., Gas Turbine Theory, Longman Co., ELBS Ed., 1989.
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Ramjets
Introduction
Ramjets can be thought of as propulsive devices evolved out of turbojets. Ramjets operates well only at high speeds, typically between M = 2.0 and 4.0. The combustion mode being not very different from that of an afterburner, the specific fuel consumption is comparable to that of afterburner. The ramjet, unlike turbojet and turbofan does not produce any thrust at zero speed. Ramjets are mostly contemplated for use in military applications.
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A scram jet engine is an engine that is much lighter than a conventional jet engine, can propel an object at speeds of over 5000 miles per hour and has no moving parts. If you could get it to work, the trip from London to Sydney would only take two hours! This technology would also be very useful to launch small satellites. The engine runs on oxygen, which it gets from the atmosphere, and a small amount of hydrogen. The engine would save a fantastic amount on the cost of fuel. This technology has been around since the 1950s but the problem is the motor will only become efficient at five times the speed of sound or Mach 5. Because of this the plane would need two engines, an engine capable of getting it to Mach 5 and a Scram Jet.
A ramjet engine
A scramjet engine
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A ramjet has no moving parts and achieves compression of intake air by the forward speed of the air vehicle. Air entering the intake of a supersonic aircraft is slowed by aerodynamic diffusion created by the inlet and diffuser to velocities comparable to those in a turbojet augmenter. The expansion of hot gases after fuel injection and combustion accelerates the exhaust air to a velocity higher than that at the inlet and creates positive push. Scramjet is an acronym for Supersonic Combustion Ramjet. The scramjet differs from the ramjet is that combustion takes place at supersonic air velocities through the engine. It is mechanically simple, but vastly more complex aerodynamically than a jet engine. Hydrogen is normally the fuel used. A scramjet (supersonic combustion ramjet) is a variation of a ramjet with the key difference being that the flow in the combustor is supersonic. At higher speeds it is necessary to combust supersonically to maximize the efficiency of the combustion process. Projections for the top speed of a scramjet engine (without additional oxidizer input) vary between Mach 12 and Mach 24 (orbital velocity), but the X-30 research gave Mach 17 due to combustion rate issues. By way of contrast, the fastest conventional air-breathing, manned vehicles, such as the U.S. Air Force SR-71, achieve slightly more than Mach 3.2 and rockets achieved Mach 30+ during Apollo. Like a ramjet, a scramjet essentially consists of a constricted tube through which inlet air is compressed by the high speed of the vehicle, fuel is combusted, and then the exhaust jet leaves at higher speed than the inlet air. Also like a ramjet, there are few or no moving parts. In particular there is no high speed turbine as in a turbofan or turbojet engine that can be a major point of failure. A scramjet requires supersonic airflow through the engine, thus, similar to a ramjet, scramjets have a minimum functional speed. This speed is uncertain due to the low number of working scramjets, relative youth of the field, and the largely classified nature of research using complete scramjet engines. However it is likely to be at least Mach 5 for a pure scramjet, with higher Mach numbers 7-9 more likely. Thus scramjets require acceleration to hypersonic speed via other means. A hybrid ramjet/scramjet would have a lower minimum functional Mach number, and some sources indicate the NASA X-43A research vehicle is a hybrid design. Recent tests of prototypes have used a booster rocket to obtain the necessary velocity. Air breathing engines should have significantly better specific impulse while within the atmosphere than rocket engines. However scramjets have weight and complexity issues that must be considered. While very short suborbital scramjets test flights have been successfully performed, perhaps
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significantly no flown scramjet has ever been successfully designed to survive a flight test. The viability of scramjet vehicles is hotly contested in aerospace and space vehicle circles, in part because many of the parameters which would eventually define the efficiency of such a vehicle remain uncertain. This has led to grandiose claims from both sides, which have been intensified by the large amount of funding involved in any hypersonic testing. Some notable aerospace gurus such as Henry Spencer and Jim Oberg have gone so far as calling orbital scramjets 'the hardest way to reach orbit', or even 'scramjets' due to the extreme technical challenges involved. Major, well funded projects, like the X-30 were cancelled before producing any working hardware. The scramjet is a proposed solution to both of these problems, by modifications of the ramjet design. The main change is that the blockage inside the engine is reduced, so that the air isn't slowed down as much. This means that the air is cooler, so that the fuel can burn properly. Unfortunately the higher speed of the air means that the fuel has to mix and burn in a very short time, which is difficult to achieve. To keep the combustion of the fuel going at the same rate, the pressure and temperature in the engine need to be kept constant. Unfortunately, the blockages which were removed from the ramjet were useful to control the air in the engine, and so the scramjet is forced to fly at a particular speed for each altitude. This is called a "constant dynamic pressure path" because the wind that the scramjet feels in its face is constant, making the scramjet fly faster at higher altitude and slower at lower altitude. The inside of a very simple scramjet would look like two kitchen funnels attached by their small ends. The first funnel is the intake, and the air is pushed through, becoming compressed and hot. In the small section, where the two funnels join, fuel is added, and the combustion makes the gas become even hotter and more compressed. Finally, the second funnel is a nozzle, like the nozzle of a rocket, and thrust is produced. Note that most artists' impressions of scramjet-powered vehicle designs depict waveriders where the underside of the vehicle forms the intake and nozzle of the engine. This means that the intake and nozzle of the engine are asymmetric and contribute directly to the lift of the aircraft. A waverider is the required form for a hypersonic lifting body A scramjet is a type of engine which is designed to operate at the high speeds normally associated with rocket propulsion. It differs from a classic rocket by using air collected from the atmosphere to burn its fuel, as opposed to an oxidizer carried with the vehicle. Normal jet engines and ramjet engines also use air collected from the atmosphere in this way. The problem is that collecting air from the atmosphere causes drag, which increases quickly as the speed increases.
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Also, at high speed, the air collected becomes so hot that the fuel no longer burns properly. Theory All scramjet engines have fuel injectors, a combustion chamber, a thrust nozzle and an inlet, which compresses the incoming air. Sometimes engines also include a region which acts as a flame holder, although the high stagnation temperatures mean that an area of focused waves may be used, rather than a discrete engine part as seen in turbine engines. Other engines use pyrophoric fuel additives, such as silane, to avoid such issues. An isolator between the inlet and combustion chamber is often included to improve the homogeneity of the flow in the combustor and to extend the operating range of the engine. A scramjet is reminiscent of a ramjet. In a typical ramjet, the supersonic inflow of the engine is decelerated at the inlet to subsonic speeds and then reaccelerated through a nozzle to supersonic speeds to produce thrust. This deceleration, which is produced by a normal shock, creates a total pressure loss which limits the upper operating point of a ramjet engine. For a scramjet, the kinetic energy of the freestream air entering the scramjet engine is large compared to the energy released by the reaction of the oxygen content of the air with a fuel (say hydrogen). Thus the heat released from combustion at Mach 25 is around 10% of the total enthalpy of the working fluid. Depending on the fuel, the kinetic energy of the air and the potential combustion heat release will be equal at around Mach 8. Thus the design of a scramjet engine is as much about minimizing drag as maximizing thrust. This high speed makes the control of the flow within the combustion chamber more difficult. Since the flow is supersonic, no upstream influence propagates within the freestream of the combustion chamber. Thus throttling of the entrance to the thrust nozzle is not a usable control technique. In effect, a block of gas entering the combustion chamber must mix with fuel and have sufficient time for initiation and reaction, all the while travelling supersonically through the combustion chamber, before the burned gas is expanded through the thrust nozzle. This places stringent requirements on the pressure and temperature of the flow, and requires that the fuel injection and mixing be extremely efficient. Usable dynamic pressures lie in the range 20 to 200 kPa (0.2-2 bar), where
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(rho) is the density of the gas v is the velocity of the gas Fuel injection and management is also potentially complex. One possibility would be that the fuel is pressurized to 100 bar by a turbo pump, heated by the fuselage, sent through the turbine and accelerated to higher speeds than the air by a nozzle. The air and fuel stream are crossed in a comb like structure, which generates a large interface. Turbulence due to the higher speed of the fuel lead to additional mixing. Complex fuels like kerosine need a long engine to complete combustion. The minimum Mach number at which a scramjet can operate is limited by the fact that the compressed flow must be hot enough to burn the fuel, and of high enough pressure that the reaction is finished before the air moves out the back of the engine. Additionally, in order to be called a scramjet, the compressed flow must still be supersonic after combustion. Here two limits must be observed: Firstly, since when a supersonic flow is compressed it slows down, the level of compression must be low enough (or the initial speed high enough) not to slow down the gas below Mach 1. If the gas within a scramjet goes below Mach 1 the engine will "choke", transitioning to subsonic flow in the combustion chamber. This effect is well known amongst experimenters on scramjets since the waves caused by choking are easily observable. Additionally, the sudden increase in pressure and temperature in the engine can lead to an acceleration of the combustion, leading to the combustion chamber exploding. Secondly, the heating of the gas by combustion causes the speed of sound in the gas to increase (and the Mach number to decrease) even though the gas is still traveling at the same speed. Forcing the speed of air flow in the combustion chamber under Mach 1 in this way is called "thermal choking". It is clear that a pure scramjet can operate at Mach numbers of 6-8, but in the lower limit, it depends on the definition of a scramjet. Certainly there are designs where a ramjet transforms into a scramjet over the Mach 3-6 range (Dual-mode scramjets). In this range however, the engine is still receiving significant thrust from subsonic combustion of "ramjet" type. The high cost of flight testing and the unavailability of ground facilities have hindered scramjet development. A large amount of the experimental work on scramjets has been undertaken in cryogenic facilities, direct-connect tests, or burners, each of which simulates one aspect of the engine operation.
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Further, vitiated facilities, storage heated facilities, arc facilities and the various types of shock tunnels each have limitations which have prevented perfect simulation of scramjet operation. The HyShot flight test showed the relevance of the 1:1 simulation of conditions in the T4 and HEG shock tunnels, despite having cold models and a short test time. The NASA-CIAM tests provided similar verification for CIAM's C-16 V/K facility and the Hyper-X project is expected to provide similar verification for the Langley AHSTF , CHSTF and 8 ft HTT. Computational fluid dynamics has only recently reached a position to make reasonable computations in solving scramjet operation problems. Boundary layer modeling, turbulent mixing, two-phase flow, flow separation, and realgas aerothermodynamics continue to be problems on the cutting edge of CFD. Additionally, the modeling of kinetic-limited combustion with very fast-reacting species such as hydrogen makes severe demands on computing resources. Reaction schemes are numerically stiff, having typical times as low as 10-19 seconds, requiring reduced reaction schemes. Much of scramjet experimentation remains classified. Several groups including the US Navy with the SCRAM engine between 1968-1974, and the Hyper-X program with the X-43A have claimed successful demonstrations of scramjet technology. Since these results have not been published openly, they remain unverified and a final design method of scramjet engines still does not exist. The final application of a scramjet engine is likely to be in conjunction with engines which can operate outside the scramjet's operating range. Dual-mode scramjets combine subsonic combustion with supersonic combustion for operation at lower speeds, and rocket-based combined cycle (RBCC) engines supplement a traditional rocket's propulsion with a scramjet, allowing for additional oxidizer to be added to the scramjet flow. RBCCs offer a possibility to extend a scramjet's operating range to higher speeds or lower intake dynamic pressures than would otherwise be possible.
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Similar to a reentering space vehicle, heat insulation from atmospheric friction would be a formidable task. The time in the atmosphere would be greater than that for a typical space capsule, but less than that of the space shuttle. Therefore studies often plan on "active cooling", where coolant circulating throughout the vehicle skin prevents it from disintegrating from the fiery atmospheric friction. Active cooling could require more weight and complexity. There is also safety concern since it's an active system. Often, however, the coolant is the fuel itself, much in the same way that modern rockets use their own fuel and oxidizer as coolant for their engines. Both scramjets and conventional rockets are at risk in the event of a cooling failure.
Half an engine The typical waverider scramjet concept involves, effectively, only half an engine. The shockwave of the vehicle itself compresses the inlet gasses, forming the first half of the engine. Likewise, only fuel (the light component) needs tankage, pumps, etc. This greatly reduces craft mass and construction effort, but the resultant engine is still very much heavier than an equivalent rocket or conventional turbojet engine of similar thrust.
Simplicity of design Scramjets have few to no moving parts. Most of their body consists of continuous surfaces. With simple fuel pumps, reduced total components, and the reentry system being the craft itself, scramjet development tends to be more of a materials and modelling problem than anything else.
Additional propulsion requirements A scramjet cannot produce efficient thrust unless boosted to high speed, around Mach 5, depending on design, although, as mentioned earlier, it could act as a ramjet at low speeds. A horizontal take-off aircraft would need conventional turbofan or rocket engines to take off, sufficiently large to move a heavy craft. Also needed would be fuel for those engines, plus all engine associated mounting structure and control systems. Turbofan engines are heavy and cannot easily exceed about Mach 2-3, so another propulsion method would be needed to reach scramjet operating speed. That could be ramjets or rockets. Those would also need their own separate fuel supply, structure, and systems. Many proposals instead call for a first stage of droppable solid rocket boosters, which greatly simplifies the design.
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Pulsejet
Pulsejet is a constant volume combustion device which is quite efficient only at low speeds and uses unsteady combustion for its operation. Once the system is started, it works by taking in air and fuel and combustion them during a part of the cycle and exhausting it during the next part of the cycle. In order to promote and sustain the operation, a flapper device of metal or plastic, in recent times, is used in front end.
Supersonic Diffuser
Super sonic diffuser may be divided into two separate parts: the supersonic inlet and the subsonic diffuser. Although this division is a convenient one, it must be remembered that the phenomena in the supersonic and subsonic parts of the diffuser can, and often do, interact. It should be remembered that the higher the Mach number, the greater will be our percentage loss in pressure across a normal shock. Thus, at very high mach numbers, there is an appreciable difference between (1) isentropic compression through out and (2) compression with a normal shock. The limitations imposed by the losses associated with a normal shock at higher Mach numbers stimulated the development of a modified simple inlet design which incorporates a spike or wedge in the nose section of the diffuser. The modified design utilizes the spike or wedge to produce an oblique shock at the nose section, and, the mach number after an oblique shock are greater than one. Consequently, in addition to the oblique shock, we have a normal shock near the minimum area section. The
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compression after the normal shock is of the standard subsonic diffuser type; that is, an increase in area decreases the velocity. It might be asked why a diffuser which has two shock waves, namely, an oblique and a normal shock, would give better results than a simple inlet which has only one normal shock. The reason for this is that the losses across a series of weak shock are less than the losses across one or several strong shocks. This means that the losses across the normal shock which follows the oblique shock are considerably less than the losses across a normal shock in the free stream. Increasing the number of oblique shocks before the normal shock reduces the losses through the shock system. It must be noted that the complexity of the inlet also increases as the number shocks increases. In addition to the number of shocks, the pressure losses are also function of the shock arrangement. It may be noted that the maximum total pressure recovery occurs when the total pressure recovery is the same across each of oblique shocks, and very nearly equal to that across the final normal shock.
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because small changes in angles of attack or yaw or boundary layer separation can induce the critical mode of operation across the threshold into the subcritical regime. Consequently, for actual operation it is usually better to operate the inlet in a more stable condition, the supercritical regime.
The three basic modes operation frequently referred to aircraft inlets are subcritical operation, critical operation, and supercritical operation, which are shown schematically for a typical case in the above figure. With entirely diverging internal flow such as this, the normal shock position is determined by a downstream flow restriction rather than by the inlet geometry. Hence operating mode is sensitive to variations in exhaust-nozzle area and fuel flow rate. Subcritical operation entails spilling of flow and a normal shock upstream of the inlet. Low and high subcritical operations differ only in the extent of spilling. Supercritical operation occurs at the same mass flow as critical operation, but with increased losses, since the normal shock occurs at a higher Mach number. All these three inlets are operated at the design Mach number, MD, which by definition, means that the conical shock or conical shock extended will intersect the cowl lip.
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Ramjet Performance
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The ramjet has the virtue of maximum simplicity, with no need for turbomachinery, and maximum tolerance to high-temperature operation and minimum mass-per-unit thrust at suitable flight Mach numbers. The ramjet also has its limitations. As well as being generally incapable of steady operation at subsonic Mach numbers, it has an upper Mach number limit. For the conventional ramjet (in which the supersonic inlet air is slowed to subsonic speeds to provide stable combustion prior to the nozzle expansion), there is a limiting Mach number of about 6, above which the temperature of the air entering the combustor is so high that combustion cannot be completed. Most of the chemical energy of combustion is nonusefully transformed into dissociation reactions that on expansion do not provide the exhaust velocity needed for satisfactory ramjet performance. To avoid this problem, substantial research has been, and is still being, focused on the supersonic combustion ramjet (SCRAMJET). The difference between this and the conventional ramjet is that combustion is to take place in a supersonic stream. Fuel must be injected into the supersonic stream (without causing disruptive shock waves) and must mix and burn in a millisecond or so. Conventional fuels do not ignite quickly enough, and gaseous hydrogen seems the most likely candidate. Design of the fuel injector is a formidable challenge; so is the problem of cooling a vehicle designed to operate at Mach numbers of 4 or higher. Hydrogen could conceivably serve for structural cooling as well as for engine fuel. It will be clear from this discussion that future designs for supersonic (or even hypersonic) aircraft must cope with the design challenges of a whole range of flight Mach numbers.
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Supersonic Combustion
The losses associated with subsonic ramjet combustion can be substantial. If ramjets are to be applied to hypersonic flight, additional problems arise because of extremely high temperature at the entrance to the combustion chamber. This not only makes vehicle cooling very difficult, but it leads to severe combustion loss due to dissociation. Figure shows the air temperature reached after adiabatic deceleration from a high-altitude ambient temperature of 220 K and from flight Mach number M to a chamber pressure of either 1 or 10 atm. For hypersonic flight (e.g. for M > 8) the temperature of the air in the chamber is quite dependent on the pressure: The higher the pressure, the less dissociation and the higher the temperature of the mixture. The temperature of the combustion products is likewise pressure dependent. Figure shows, for a combustion pressure of 10 atm and a flight Mach number of 10, there is no temperature rise due to combustion; all of the combustion energy is absorbed by dissociation. One sees from the above Figure, the strange result that, at sufficiently high Mach number, the temperature of the combustion products can be lower than that of the incoming air. Consideration of the speed with which the fuel and air can be converted into dissociation products may show that there is sufficient residence time in the combustion chamber to approach equilibrium composition. But during the subsequent expansion in the nozzle, one cannot take equilibrium composition for granted. It is quite possible that the expansion will be too rapid for the composition to readjust, after each step of temperature and pressure reduction, to a new equilibrium composition. If the expansion extremely rapid, the mixture may be effectively frozen with the initial (high-temperature) composition. This would mean that little of the combustion energy of the fuel (for the M = 10 case) would be available for acceleration of the combustion products to produce thrust. The chemical kinetics of the recombination processes in the nozzle would, in general, have a strong effect on the thrust and the propulsion efficiency of the engine. Some researchers have proposed the concept of the supersonic combustion as a way to avoid this dissociation loss as well as the stagnation pressure losses associated with deceleration in supersonic-to-subsonic inlets. With supersonic combustion, fluid temperatures are relatively low, and this decreases the dissociation loss because dissociation depends on static rather than stagnation temperature. Wall heat transfer, in contrast, depends essentially on stagnation temperature, so the wall-cooling problem is not removed by employing supersonic combustion. The stagnation pressure loss due to supersonic heating depends on the extent to which the fluid is being accelerated while combustion is taking place. The use of supersonic combustion requires fuel to be injected into, and mixed with, a supersonic stream without excessive shock losses.
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The main advantages of the ramjet engine are; 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. High temperature can be employed In the absence of rotating machinery its construction is very simple and cheap It can operate effectively at high supersonic Mach numbers It is not very sensitive to the quality of fuel It provides high thrust per unit weight and frontal area
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Ramjet engines Main disadvantages are; 1. 2. 3. 4. It requires a launching device at supersonic speed It is unsuitable for subsonic flight It has low thermal efficiency and high TSFC Its maximum operating altitude is limited
Ideal Efficiency Various process occurring in the ramjet engine can be represented by an open circuit Brayton cycle. This cycle is considered here with the following assumptions: 1. Steady one-dimensional flow 2. Isentropic compression and expansion, s = 0, P0 = 0 3. Perfect gas 4. Constant pressure heat addition in the combustion chamber, P2 = P3 5. Very low Mach number in the combustion chamber. P2 P02 P03 T2 T02 T03 Compression and expansion process here are thermodynamically different from turbo jet engine. These process here experience only energy transformation; there is no energy transfer such as compressor and turbine work within the engine. Thrust work is obtained from the energy supplied in the fuel during process 2-3. Heat is rejected during process 41 outside the engine. However, the ideal efficiency of the ramjet engine is still given by Equation,
1 1 i = 1 = 1 ( 1) / t r
Here, the temperature ratio, with the above assumption is given by
t =
T2 T T 1 2 = 02 = 01 = 1 + Mi T1 T1 T1 2
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Substituting the value of t from the above Equation to the previous equation we get,
1 i = 1
1 2 = 1 2 1 2 1+ M1 1+ M1 2 2
M 12
i =
1 = f (M 1 ) 2 1 1+ 1 M 12
Though the actual thermal efficiency of the ramjet engine will be much lower than the value given by the above equation it demonstrates an important characteristic i.e., the efficiency increases with the flight Mach number and has a high value (76.19 % at M1 = 4) at higher operating Mach numbers. Other performance parameters and efficiencies defined for air-breathing engines are also applicable for the ram jet engine.
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The thermal efficiency or the Air standard Efficiency of the ideal cycle 1-2s-3-4s is given by, = work / heat supplied = 1 Qr/Qs = 1 (T4s T1)/(T3-T2s) The pressure ratio in the compressor and turbine is same, i.e., r = P2/P1 = P3/P4
Therefore the corresponding temperature ratios are given by,
t=
P2 T2 s T = 3 = r ( 1) / = T1 T4 s P 1
( 1) /
P3 = P 4
( 1) /
AS
1 1 = 1 = 1 ( 1) / t r
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At Z = 6500 m the properties of air are T1 = 245.90 K, p1 = 0.440 bar, a1 = 414.5 m/s = 0.624 kg/m3 (a) Ideal cycle efficiency
i =
1 2 1 1+ 1 M 12
= 0.310 Ans. (b) M1 = u/a1 U = M1 a1 = 1.5 x 314.5 = 471.75 m/s Flight speed = 1698.3 kmph Ans. ( C) Area of cross section of the diffuser inlet A1 = d2/4 = 0.52/4 = 0.1963 m2
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m a = 1uA1
= 0.624 X 471.48 X 0.1963 Air flow rate = 57.752 kg/s Ans. (d) For negligible velocity at the diffuser exit, P02 = P2
P2 1 P D = 1 1 2 M1 2
D = 0.9, M1 = 1.5 P2/P1 = 3.2875 P2 = 3.2875 x 0.44 = 1.446 Ans.
( 1) /
(e)
T01 1 2 = 1+ M 1 = 1.45 T1 2
= 1.45 x 245.9 = 356.55 K
m a C p (T03 T02 ) = B m f Q f
f =
mf
= C p (T03 T02 ) / B Q f
ma
f = 1.005 (1600-356.55)/0.98 x 40000
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(f) P03 = P02 0.02 P02 = 0.98 P02 = 0.98 x 1.446 = 1.417 bar Nozzle pressure ratio,
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F = m C4 m a u
= (59.593 x 937.185 57.752 x 471.75) 10-3 Thrust = 28.614 kN Ans
Operation
A normal chemical rocket engine carries oxidizer and a fuel, sometimes pre-mixed, as in a solid rocket, which are then burned. The heat generated greatly increases the temperature of the mixture, which is then exhausted through a nozzle where it expands and cools. The exhaust is directed rearward through the nozzle, thereby producing a thrust forward. In this conventional design, the fuel/oxidizer mixture is both the working mass and energy source that accelerates it. One method of increasing the overall performance of the system is to collect either the fuel or the oxidizer during flight. Fuel is hard to come by in the atmosphere, but oxidizer in the form of gaseous oxygen makes up 20% of the air and there are a number of designs that take advantage of this fact. These sorts of systems have been explored in the LACE (liquid air cycle engine) concept.
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Another idea is to collect the working mass instead. With an air-augmented rocket, an otherwise conventional rocket engine is mounted in the center of a long tube, open at the front. As the rocket moves through the atmosphere the air enters the front of the tube, where it is compressed via the ram effect. As it travels down the tube it is further compressed and mixed with the fuelrich exhaust from the rocket engine, which heats the air much as a combustor would in a ramjet. In this way a fairly small rocket can be used to accelerate a much larger working mass than normally, leading to significantly higher thrust within the atmosphere. A liquid air cycle engine (LACE) is a spacecraft propulsion engine that attempts to gain efficiency by gathering part of its oxidizer from the atmosphere. In a LOX/LH2 bipropellant rocket the liquid oxygen needed for combustion is the majority of the weight of the spacecraft on lift-off, so if some of this can be collected from the air on the way, it might dramatically lower the take-off weight of the spacecraft.
Principle of operation
LACE works by compressing and then quickly liquefying the air. Compression is achieved through the ram-air effect in an intake similar to that found on a high-speed aircraft like Concorde, where intake ramps create shock waves that compress the air. The LACE design then blows the compressed air over a heat exchanger, in which the liquid hydrogen fuel is flowing. This rapidly cools the air, and the various constituents quickly liquefy. By careful mechanical arrangement the liquid oxygen can be removed from the other parts of the air, notably water, nitrogen and carbon dioxide, at which point it can be fed into the engine as normal. The hydrogen is so much lighter than oxygen that the now-warm hydrogen is often dumped overboard instead of being re-used as fuel, at a net gain. One issue with the LACE system is that in order to appreciably reduce the mass of the oxygen carried at launch, a LACE vehicle needs to spend more time in the lower atmosphere where it can collect enough oxygen to supply the engines. This leads to greatly increased vehicle heating and drag, which offset somewhat the savings in oxidizer weight, but this in turn is offset by higher Isp (Specific impulse) permitting a lifting trajectory which greatly reduces gravity losses. More significantly the LACE system is far heavier than a rocket engine, and the performance of launch vehicles of all types is particularly affected by dry mass, rather than any oxidizer mass which would be burnt off over the course of the flight.
Additional Reading:
1. 2. 3. Hill, P.G. & Peterson, C.R. Mechanics & Thermodynamics of Propulsion Addison Wesley Longman INC, 1999. Cohen, H., Rogers, G.F.C. and Saravanamuttoo, H.I.H., Gas Turbine Theory, Longman Co., ELBS Ed., 1989. Gorden, C.V., Aero thermodynamics of Gas Turbine and Rocket Propulsion, AIAA Education Series, New York, 1989. Mathur, M., and Sharma, R.P., Gas Turbines and Jet and Rocket Propulsion, Standard Publishers, New Delhi, 1988.
4.
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Principle
All the conventional propulsion systems work by causing a change of momentum in a working fluid in a direction opposite to the intended motion. Rockets fall under the category of direct acting engines since the energy liberated by the chemical process is directly used to obtain thrust. Being non-air breathing devices the basic component of a rocket are (i) Combustion chamber where exothermic processes produces gases at high temperature and pressure, and (ii) Nozzle, which accelerate the fluid to high velocities and discharge them into surrounding atmosphere thereby deriving the desired force or thrust.
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10-6 - 10-2
10-5-10-3
Years
150 - 6000
3 4
~ 10-3 20-30
50 - 100 800
upto 80
150-450
@ shuttle main engine operate for about 8 min at a time but over 7 hrs cumulatively.
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Specific Impulse
The specific impulse of a rocket, Isp, is the ratio of the thrust to the flow rate of the weight ejected, that is
where F is thrust, is the rate of mass flow, and g is the acceleration of gravity at ground level. Specific impulse is expressed in seconds. When the thrust and the flow rate remain constant throughout the burning of the propellant, the specific impulse is the time for which the rocket engine provides a thrust equal to the weight of the propellant consumed. For a given engine, the specific impulse has different values on the ground and in the vacuum of space because the ambient pressure is involved in the expression for the thrust. It is therefore important to state whether specific impulse is the value at sea level or in a vacuum. There are a number of losses within a rocket engine, the main ones being related to the inefficiency of the chemical reaction (combustion) process, losses due to the nozzle, and losses due to the pumps. Overall, the losses affect the efficiency of the specific impulse. This is the ratio of the real specific impulse (at sea level, or in a vacuum) and the theoretical specific impulse obtained with an ideal nozzle from gases coming from a complete chemical reaction. Calculated values of specific impulse are several percent higher than those attained in practice. From Equation (2.8) we can substitute C for F in Equation (2.23), thus obtaining
Equation (2.24) is very useful when solving Equations (2.18) through (2.21). It is rare we are given the value of C directly, however rocket engine specific impulse is a commonly given parameter.
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Internal Ballistics
The parameters that govern the burning rate and mass discharge rate of rocket motors are called internal ballistic properties; they include r K propellant burning rate (velocity of consumption), m/sec or mm/sec or in/sec. ratio of burning surface to throat area, Ab/At
p temperature sensitivity of burning rate, expressed as percent change of burning rate per degree change in propellant temperature at a particular value of chamber pressure.
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Apart from the propellant formulation and propellant manufacturing process, burning ratein a full-scale motor can be increased by the following 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Combustion chamber pressure Initial temperature of the solid propellant prior to start Combustion gas temperature Velocity of the gas flow parallel to the burning surface Motor motion ( acceleration and spin-induced grain stress)
Burning rate data are usually obtained in three ways namely, from testing by: 1. Standard strand burners, often called Crawford burners 2. Small-scale ballistic evaluation motors 3. Full-scale motors with good instrumentation A strand burner is a small pressure vessal (usually with windows) in which a thin strand or bar of propellant is ignited at one end and burned to the other end. The strand can be inhibited with an external coating so that it will burn only on the exposed cross-sectional surface; chamber pressure is simulated by pressurizing the container with inert gas. The burning rate can be measured by electric signals from embedded wires, by ultrasonic waves, or by optical means. The burning rate measured on strand burners is usually lower than that obtained from actual rocket motor firing (by 4 to 12%) because it does not truly simulate the hot chamber environment of an actual rocket motor. Also small ballistic evaluation motors usually have a slightly lower burning rate than full-scale large motors, because of scaling factors. During development of a new or modified solid propellant, it is tested extensively or characterized. This includes the testing of the burn rate (in several different ways) under different temperatures, pressures, impurities, and conditions. It also requires measurements of physical, chemical, and manufacturing properties, ignitability, aging, sensitivity to various energy inputs or stimuli (e.g., shock, friction, fires), moister absorption, compatibility with other materials (liners, insulators, cases), and other characteristics. It is a lengthy, expensive, often hazardous program with many tests, samples, and analyses. The burning rate of propellant in a motor is a function of many parameters, and at any
= Ab r b
Here Ab is the burning area of the propellant grain, r the burning rate, and b the solid propellant density prior to motor start. The total mass m of effective propellant burned can be determined by integrating the above equation,
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m=
m dt
= b Ab r dt
Where Ab and r vary with time and pressure. Burning Rate Relation with Pressure Classical equations relating to burning rate are helpful in preliminary design, data extrapolation, and understanding the phenomena. Unless otherwise stated, burning rate is expressed for 70oF or 294 K propellant (prior to ignition) burning at a reference chamber pressure of 1000 psia or 6.895 MPa. For most production-type propellant the burning rate is approximated as a function of chamber pressure, at least for a limited range of chamber pressures, which is given as r = a Pn where r, the burn rate, is usually in centimeter per second and chamber pressure P is in MPa; a is an empirical constant influenced by ambient temperature. Also a is known as the temperature coefficient and it is NOT dimensionless. The burning rate exponent n, sometimes called the combustion index, is independent of the initial grain temperature and describes the influence of chamber pressure on the burning rate. Burning Rate Relation with Temperature Temperature affects chemical reaction rates and the initial ambient temperature of a propellant grain prior to combustion influences burning rate. The sensitivity of burning rate to propellant temperature can be expressed in the form of temperature coefficient, the two most common being
p = K =
1 r ln r = r T p T p
1 P ln p = P T K T K
with p , temperature sensitivity of burning rate and K, temperature sensitivity of pressure. The coefficient p (typically 0.001 0.009 / K) for a new propellant is usually calculated from strand burner test data, and K (typically 0.067 0.278 % / oC) from small-scale or full-scale motors. Mathematically, these coefficients are the partial derivatives of the natural logarithm of the burning rate r or the chamber pressure p, respectively, with respect to propellant temperature T. The values of K and p depend primarily on the nature of the propellant burning rate, the composition, and the combustion mechanism of the propellant. It is possible to derive a relationship between the two temperature sensitivities, namely
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K =
1 p 1 n
This formula is usually valid when the three variables are constant over the chamber pressure and temperature range. The temperature sensitivity p can be also expressed as
ln (aP n ) 1 da p = = a dT T p
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In the above figure the straight line through the origin and point S depicts the mass flow through the nozzle as a function of Pc. At point S there is a balance between mass production and
__
outflux of the mass. At higher pressures (> Pc ) the mass flow through the nozzle is larger than the production at the burning surface in case n < 1 and the reverse happens for n > 1. Thus if
__
n < 1 the pressure will drop to its steady-state value Pc . Note that when n < 1 even at higher chamber pressure rocket motor will back to its designed equilibrium chamber pressure and ensure a stable operation. On the other hand when n>1 these types of situations will possibly lead to over-pressurization and rupture of the rocket motor or depressurization and flame out.
Erosive Burning
Erosive burning refers to the increase in the propellant burning caused by the high-velocity flow of combustion gases over the burning propellant surface. It can seriously affect the performance of solid propellant rocket motors. It occurs primarily in the port passages or perforations of the grain as the combustion gases flow toward the nozzle; it is more likely to occur ehen the port passage cross-sectional area A is small relative to the throat area At with a port-to-throat area
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ratio of 4 or less. The high velocity near the burning surface and the turbulent mixing in the boundary layers increase the heat transfer to the solid propellant and thus increase the burning rate.
Erosive burning increases the mass flow and thus also the chamber pressure and thrust during the early portion of the burning for a particular motor (see above Fig.). Erosive burning causes early burnout of the web, usually at the nozzle end, and exposes the insulation and aft closure to hot combustion gas for a longer period of time; this usually requires more insulation layer thickness (and more inert mass) to prevent local thermal failure. In designing motors, erosive burning is either avoided or controlled to be reproducible from one motor to the next. Total burning rate = steady state burning rate ( aPcn ) + erosive burning
d k 2 Ab r b = ( 1V1 ) + At P 1 dt RT1 k + 1
( k +1) /( k 1)
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The term on the left side of the equation gives the mass rate of gas generation. The first term on the right gives the change in propellant mass in the gas volume of the combustion chamber, and the last term gives the nozzle flow. The burning rate of propellant is r; Ab is the propellant burning area; b is the solid propellant density; 1 is the combustion gas density; V1 is the chamber gas cavity volume, which becomes larger as the propellant is expended; At is the throat area; P1 is the chamber pressure; T1 is the absolute chamber temperature, which is usually assumed to be constant; and k is the specific heat ratio of the combustion gases. During startup the changing mass of propellant in the grain cavity becomes important.
v2 =
P 2k 2 RT1 1 P k 1 1
( k 1) / k
+ v12
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This relation also holds for any two points within the nozzle. Note that when the chamber section is large compared to the nozzle throat section, the chamber velocity or nozzle approach velocity is comparatively small and the v12 can be neglected. The chamber temperature T1 is at the nozzle inlet and, under isentropic condition, differ little from the stagnation temperature or (for a chemical rocket) from combustion temperature. This leads to an important simplified expression of the exhaust velocity v2, which is often used in the analysis.
v2 =
P 2k 2 RT1 1 k 1 P 1
( k 1) / k
( k 1) / k 2k R 'To P2 1 k 1 M P 1
F = m v 2 + ( p 2 p3 ) A2
F = C F At P1
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Where CF is the thrust coefficient, which can be derived as a function of gas property k, the nozzle area ratio (A2/At), and the pressure ratio across the nozzle p1/p2 , but independent of chamber temperature. For any fixed pressure ratio (p1/p3) the thrust coefficient CF and the thrust F have a peak when p2 = p3. This peak value is known as optimum thrust coefficient.
CF =
2k 2 2 k 1 k +1
( k +1) /( k 1)
p ( k 1) / k p 2 p 3 A2 2 1 + p p1 At 1
It is usually given in meters per second. The concept of weight relates to the gravitational attraction at or near sea level, but in space or outer satellite orbits, weight signifies the mass multiplied by an arbitrary constant, namely go. In system international (SI) or metric system of units Isp can be expressed simply in seconds, because of the use of the constant go.
Mass Ratio
The mass ratio of a vehicle or a particular vehicle stage is defined to be the final mass mf (after rocket operation has consumed all usable propellant) divided by initial mass mo (before rocket operation).
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This applies to a single or multi-stage vehicle. The final mass mf is the mass of the vehicle after the rocket has ceased to operate when all the useful propellant mass mp has been consumed and ejected. The final vehicle mass mf includes all those components that are not useful propellant and may include guidance devices, navigation gear, payload (e.g., scientific instruments or a military warhead), flight control systems, communication devices, power supplies, tank structure, residual or unusable propellant, and all the propulsion hardware. In some vehicles it can also include wings, fins, a crew, life support systems, reentry shields, landing gears etc. Typical value of Mass ratio can range from 60% for tactical missiles to less than 10 % for unmanned launch vehicle stages. This mass ratio is an important parameter in analyzing flight performance. Note that when mass-ratio is applied to a single stage of a multi-stage rocket, then its upper stages become the payload
mp mo
mo = mf + mp
Characteristic Velocity
The characteristic velocity has been used frequently in the rocket propulsion literature. It is represented by a symbol C*. It is defined as,
C =
p1 At
m
The characteristic velocity is used in comparing the relative performance of different chemical rocket propulsion system designs and propellants. It is basically a function of the propellant
characteristics. It is easily determined from data of m , p1, and At. It relates to the efficiency of the combustion and is essentially independent of nozzle characteristics. However, the specific impulse and the effective exhaust velocities are functions of the nozzle geometry, such as the nozzle area ratio.
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Problems:
Q1. A rocket projectile has the following characteristics: Initial mass = 200kg Mass after rocket operation = 130 kg Payload, nonpropulsive structure, etc., = 110 kg Rocket operation duration = 3.0 sec Average specific impulse of propellant = 240 sec Determine the vehicles (i) mass ratio, (ii) propellant mass fraction, (iii) propellant flow rate, (iv) thrust, (v) thrust-to-weight ratio, (vi) acceleration of the vehicle, (vii) effective exhaust velocity, (viii) total impulse, and (ix) the impulse to weight ratio.
Solution:
(i) Mass ratio of vehicle, mf/mp = 130/200 = 0.65 Mass ratio of rocket system = mf/mo = (130-110)/(200-110) = 20/90 = 0.222 (ii) Propellant mass fraction = (mo mf)/mo = (90-20)/90 = 0.778 (iii)Propellant mass flow rate = 70/3 = 23.3 kg/sec
(iv) Thrust = I sp m g o = 240 x 23.3 x 9.81 = 54.857 N (v) Thrust-to-weight ratio of the vehicle is Initial value Final value (vi) (vii) = 54,857 / (200 x 9.81) = 28 = 54,857 / (130 x 9.81) = 43
Maximum acceleration of the vehicle is 43 x 9.81 = 421 m/sec2 The effective exhaust velocity is c = Isp go = 240 x 9.81 = 2354 m/sec
(viii) Total impulse = Isp w = 240 x 70 x 9.81 = 164, 808 N-sec This result can also be obtained by multiplying the thrust by the duration. (ix) The impulse to weight ratio of the propulsion system is = 164,808 / [(200-110) x 9.81] = 187
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Q2.
The following measurements were made in a sea level test of a solid propellant rocket motor: Burn duration = 40 sec Initial mass before test = 1210 kg Mass of rocket motor after test = 215 kg Average thrust = 62,250 N Chamber pressure = 7.00 MPa Nozzle exit pressure = 0.070 MPa Nozzle throat diameter = 0.855 m Nozzle exit diameter = 0.2703 m Determine m, v 2 , c , c and I sp at sea level, and c and Isp at 1000 and 25,000 m altitude. Assume an invariant thrust and mass flow rate and negligible short start and stop transients.
Solution:
Mass flow rate = (initial motor mass final motor mass)/burn time = (1210 215) / 40 = 24.9 kg/sec The nozzle areas at the throat and exit are At = D2/4 = x 0.08552 /4 = 0.00574 m2 A2 = D2/4 = x 0.27032 /4 = 0.0574 m2 The actual exhaust velocity
v2 =
( F ( p 2 p3 ) A2 )
m
= (62,250 (0.070-0.1013) 106 x 0.0574) / 24.9 = 2572 m/sec
C =
p1 At
m
= 7.00 x 106 x 0.00574/24.9 = 1613 m/sec Isp = 62,250 / (24.9 x 9.81) = 255 sec c = 255 x 9.81 = 2500 m/sec For altitudes of 1000 and 25, 000 m the ambient pressure (see atmospheric table) is 0.898 and 0.00255 MPa.
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c = v2 +
( p2 p3 ) A2
m
At 1000 m altitude, c = 2572 + (0.070-0.898) x 106 x 0.0574/24.9 = 2527 m/sec Isp = 2527/9.81 = 258 sec At 25,000 m altitude, c = 2572 + (0.070-0.00255) x 106 x 0.0574/24.9 = 2727 m/sec Isp = 2727/9.81 = 278 sec
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Rocket Nozzles
Purpose:
The nozzle is the component of a rocket or air-breathing engine that produces thrust. This is accomplished by converting the thermal energy of the hot chamber gases into kinetic energy and directing that energy along the nozzle's axis, as illustrated below.
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where
F = thrust force = mass flow rate v exit = exhaust gas velocity at the nozzle exit p exit = pressure of the exhaust gases at the nozzle exit p = ambient pressure of the atmosphere A exit = cross-sectional area of the nozzle exit
Fixing all other variables (primarily the chamber pressure), there exists only one such ratio that optimizes overall system performance for a given altitude (or ambient pressure). However, a rocket typically does not travel at only one altitude. Thus, an engineer must be aware of the trajectory over which a rocket is to travel so that an expansion ratio that maximizes performance over a range of ambient pressures can be selected. Nevertheless, other factors must also be considered that tend to alter the design from this expansion ratio-based optimum. Some of the issues designers must deal with are nozzle weight, length, manufacturability, cooling (heat transfer), and aerodynamic characteristics.
Typical temperatures (T) and pressures (p) and speeds (v) in a De Laval Nozzle
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Maximum thrust for a rocket engine is achieved by maximizing the momentum contribution of the equation without incurring penalties from over expanding the exhaust. This occurs when Pe = Pamb. Since ambient pressure changes with altitude, most rocket engines spend very little time operating at peak efficiency.
If the pressure of the exhaust jet varies from atmospheric pressure, nozzles can be said to be underexpanded, ambient or overexpanded. If under or overexpanded then loss of efficiency occurs, grossly overexpanded nozzles lose less efficiency, but the exhaust jet is usually unstable. Rockets become progressively more underexpanded as they gain altitude. Note that almost all rocket engines will be momentarily grossly overexpanded during startup in an atmosphere.
Nozzle Comparisons:
To date three major types of nozzles, the cone, the bell or contoured, and the annular or plug, have been employed. Each class satisfies the design criteria to varying degrees. Examples of these nozzle types can be seen below.
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Size comparison of optimal cone, bell, and radial nozzles for a given set of conditions Conical Nozzle:
The conical nozzle was used often in early rocket applications because of its simplicity and ease of construction. The cone gets its name from the fact that the walls diverge at a constant angle. A small angle produces greater thrust, because it maximizes the axial component of exit velocity and produces a high specific impulse (a measure of rocket efficiency). The penalty, however, is a longer and heavier nozzle that is more complex to build. At the other extreme, size and weight are minimized by a large nozzle wall angle. Unfortunately, large angles reduce performance at low altitude because the high ambient pressure causes overexpansion and flow separation.
Bell Nozzle:
The bell, the most commonly used nozzle shape, offers significant advantages over the conical nozzle, both in size and performance. Referring to the above figure, note that the bell consists of two sections. Near the throat, the nozzle diverges at a relatively large angle but the degree of diveregence tapers off further downstream. Near the nozzle exit, the diveregence angle is very small. In this way, the bell is a compromise between the two extremes of the conical nozzle since it minimizes weight while maximizing performance. The most important design issue is to contour the nozzle to avoid oblique shocks and maximize performance. However, we must remember that the final bell shape will only be the optimum at one particular altitude.
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Annular Nozzles:
The annular nozzle, also sometimes known as the plug or "altitude-compensating" nozzle, is the least employed of those discussed due to its greater complexity. The term "annular" refers to the fact that combustion occurs along a ring, or annulus, around the base of the nozzle. "Plug" refers to the centerbody that blocks the flow from what would be the center portion of a traditional nozzle. "Altitude-compensating" is sometimes used to describe these nozzles since that is their primary advantage, a quality that will be further explored later. Before describing the various forms of annular nozzles, it is useful to mention some key differences in design parameters from the conical or bell nozzles. The expansion area ratio for a traditional nozzle has already been discussed. When considering an annular nozzle, the area of the centerbody (A plug) must also be taken into account.
Another parameter particular to this type of nozzle is the annular diameter ratio, D p / D t, or the ratio of the centerbody diameter to that of the throat. The ratio is used as a measure of the nozzle geometry for comparison with other plug nozzle shapes. Typical values of this ratio appear in the above figure.
Annular Nozzles I
Having introduced the three principal families of nozzle shapes, we will now look more closely at the two major subclasses of annular, or plug, nozzles.
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Judging by the amount of literature obtained on this subject, little work has been done on the R-F and H-F nozzles, and they will not be considered further. The E-D, on the other hand, has been one of the most studied forms of annular nozzles. While similar in nature to the bell nozzle, the most notable difference is the addition of a centerbody. As shown below, this "plug" may be located upstream of, downstream of, or in the throat, with each location resulting in better performance for a given set of operating conditions.
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Annular Nozzles II
Having introduced the three principal families of nozzle shapes and discussed the radial out-flow nozzle, we will now look more closely at the second class of annular nozzles.
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Comparison of spike nozzles with (a) external expansion, (b) internal-external expansion, and (c) internal expansion [from Berman and Crimp, 1961]
Note that each of the above spike nozzles features a curved, pointed spike, the most ideal shape. This spike shape allows the exhaust gases to expand through an isentropic, or constant entropy, process. In so doing, the nozzle efficiency is maximized and no energy is lost because of turbulent mixing in the exhaust flow. While the isentropic spike may be most efficient, it also tends to be prohibitively long and heavy. However, theoretical studies have shown that replacing the curved shape by a much shorter and easier to construct cone results in very little performance loss. The following graph illustrates that the thrust decreases by less than 1% for cone halfangles up to 30. Furthermore, the graph gives an indication of how much the spike length can be reduced by employing a cone-shaped spike.
Aerospike Nozzles
A further subclass of the radial in-flow family of spike nozzles is known as the aerospike.
Aerospike Nozzles:
Previously, we discussed methods of reducing the length of a spike nozzle centerbody by replacing the ideal spike with a conical spike. While this method does indeed result in a much shorter nozzle length, we can go even further by removing the pointed spike altogether and replacing it with a flat base. This configuration is known as a truncated spike, an example of which is shown below.
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Example of an aerospike nozzle with a subsonic, recirculating flow [from Hill and Peterson, 1992]
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The circulation of this secondary flow and its interaction with the engine exhaust creates an "aerodynamic spike" that behaves much like the ideal, isentropic spike. In addition, the secondary flow re-circulates upward pushing on the base to produce additional thrust. It is this artificial aerodynamic spike for which the aerospike nozzle is named.
Linear Aerospike:
All of the nozzles we have studied thus far have been annular, or circular when viewed from below. Still another variation of the aerospike nozzle is not an annular nozzle at all. A second approach, pioneered by the Rocketdyne company (now a division of Boeing) in the 1970s, places the combustion chambers in a line along two sides of the nozzle:
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Aerospike Flowfield:
The exact nature of the exhaust flowfield behind an aerospike nozzle is currently the subject of much research. The most notable features of a typical aerospike nozzle flowfield are shown in more detail below.
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Thrust vectoring: Because the combustion chambers can be controlled individually, the vehicle can be maneuvered using differential thrust vectoring. This eliminates the need for the heavy gimbals and actuators used to vary the direction of traditional nozzles.
Additional Reading
1. Sutton, G.P., Rocket Propulsion Elements, John Wiley & Sons Inc., New York, 7th Edn., 2001.
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Unit-4
CHEMICAL ROCKETS Solid propellant rockets Selection criteria of solid propellants Important hardware components of solid rockets Propellant grain design considerations Liquid propellant rockets Selection of liquid propellants Thrust control in liquid rockets Cooling in liquid rockets Limitations of hybrid rockets Relative advantages of liquid rockets over solid rocketsNumerical Problems.
Introduction to Propulsion
Definitions and Basic Relations Fluid dynamics of compressible flows is generally referred to as Gas dynamics. This deals with an unified analysis of dynamics and thermodynamics of compressible flows. Convectional fluid mechanics analyses are inadequate for high speed flows of gases and vapours due to non-compressibility approach. Therefore in the application like high speed aerodynamics, rocket and missile propulsion, steam and gas turbines, and high speed turbocompressors compressible fluid dynamics is used to obtain solutions of a number of design problems. The properties of fluid which are generally considered in compressible flow problems are temperature, pressure, density, internal energy, enthalpy, entropy and viscosity. A major portion covered by the fluid dynamics of compressible flows deals with the relation between force, mass and velocity. The following laws are frequently used in dealing with a variety of compressible flow problems: (i) First law of thermodynamics (Energy equation). (ii) Second law of thermodynamics (Entropy relation) (iii) Law of conservation of mass (Continuity equation) (iv) Newtons second law of motion (Momentum equation)
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Goal: Create a Force to Propel a Vehicle Two options: 1) Take mass stored in a vehicle and throw it reaction force to propel the vehicle. burn ---> expand through nozzle backwards (rocket propulsion). Use the
Propellant --->
2) Seize mass from the surroundings and set the mass in motion backwards. Use the reaction force to propel vehicle (air-breathing propulsion). Continuously: a) Draw in air. b) Compress it. c) Add fuel and burn (convert chemical energy to thermal energy). d) Expand through a turbine to drive compressor (extract work). e.1) Then expand in a nozzle to convert thermal energy to kinetic & momentum (turbojet). energy
e.2) Or expand in a second turbine (extract work), use this to drive a shaft for a fan (turbofan), or a propeller (turboshaft). The fan or propeller impart k.e. & mom. to the air. *Remember: Overall goal: take at Vo (flight speed), throw it out at Vo + DV
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Flying model rockets is a relatively safe and inexpensive way for students to learn the basics of forces and the response of a vehicle to external forces. Like an airplane, a model rocket is subjected to the forces of weight, thrust, and aerodynamics during its flight. On this slide we show the parts of a single stage model rocket. We have laid the rocket on its side and cut a hole in the body tube so that we can see what is inside. Beginning at the far right, the body of the rocket is a green cardboard tube with black fins attached at the rear. The fins can be made of either plastic or balsa wood and are used to provide stability during flight. Model rockets use small, pre-packaged, solid fuel engines The engine is used only once, and then is replaced with a new engine for the next flight. Engines come in a variety of sizes and can be purchased at hobby stores and at some toy stores.
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We live in a world that is defined by three spatial dimensions and one time dimension. Objects move within this domain in two ways. An object translates, or changes location, from one point to another. And an object rotates, or changes its attitude. In general, the motion of any object involves both translation and rotation. The translations are in direct response to external forces. The rotations are in direct response to external torques or moments (twisting forces). The motion of a rocket is particularly complex because the rotations and translations are coupled together; a rotation affects the magnitude and direction of the forces which affect translations. To understand and describe the motion of a rocket, we usually try to break down the complex problem into a series of easier problems. We can, for instance, assume that the rocket translates from one point to another as if all the mass of the rocket were collected into a single point called the center of gravity. We can describe the motion of the center of gravity by using Newton's laws of motion. In general, there are four forces acting on the rocket; the weight, thrust, drag and lift.
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The thrust of the engine is transmitted to the body of the rocket through the engine mount. This part is fixed to the rocket and can be made of heavy cardboard or wood. There is a hole through the engine mount to allow the ejection charge of the engine to pressurize the body tube at the end of the coasting phase and eject the nose cone and the recovery system. Recovery wadding is inserted between the engine mount and the recovery system to prevent the hot gas of the ejection charge from damaging the recovery system. The recovery wadding is sold with the engine. The recovery system consists of a parachute (or a streamer) and some lines to connect the parachute to the nose cone. Parachutes and streamers are made of thin sheets of plastic. The nose cone can be made of balsa wood, or plastic, and may be either solid or hollow. The nose cone is inserted into the body tube before flight.
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An elastic shock cord is connected to both the body tube and the nose cone and is used to keep all the parts of the rocket together during recovery. The launch lugs are small tubes (straws) which are attached to the body tube. The launch rail is inserted through these tubes to provide stability to the rocket during launch.
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SOLID ROCKETS
Specific Impulse: 100-400 sec Thrust: 103-107 N Solid rockets are the simplest and earliest types of rocket propulsion dating back to the first rockets used by the Chinese. Solid rockets are filled with a solid mixture of a propellant and an oxidizer. Little else is actually required for these rockets. The designs are very simple and therefore very reliable. The main drawback of solid rockets is that once ignited, they burn until all of the fuel is gone. Because of this, they aren't used often in space where propulsion systems are usually required to be turned on and off many times. However, they are good for getting things into space. In fact, the space shuttles use solid rocket boosters (SRBs) during takeoff. Quick Fact : The SRBs are the largest solid-propellant motors ever flown and the first designed for reuse. Each is 149.16 feet long and 12.17 feet in diameter.
MONOPROPELLANT ROCKETS
Specific Impulse: 100-300 sec Thrust: 0.1-100 N Monopropellant rockets are simple propulsion systems that rely on special chemicals which, when energized, decompose. This decomposition creates both the fuel and an oxidizer (which allows the fuel to burn), which then react with each other. Because they only use a single propellant, monopropellant rockets are quite simple and reliable. Unfortunately, they are not very efficient. They are mainly used to make small adjustments such as attitude control. Main propulsion systems usually use some other technology.
BIPROPELLANT ROCKETS
Specific Impulse: 100-400 sec Thrust: 0.1-107 N Bipropellant rockets separate the fuel and oxidizer and mix them in the chamber where they burn. Bipropellant rockets are widely used and more efficient than monopropellant rockets. The reaction given in the lesson on chemistry gives an example of a fuel(H2)/oxidizer(O2) combination. It's actually a very good combination in that it releases a large amount of energy. It's the combination used by the space shuttle's main engines. Unfortunately, large tanks kept at extremely low temperatures are required to
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carry them. In fact, the main purpose of the giant red external tank attached to the space shuttle on take-off is to carry enough fuel to get the space shuttle into space. The main drawback of bipropellant rockets is that they are more complex than solid or monopropellant rockets. The fuel and oxidizer have to be stored separately and fed together in exactly the right ratios to achieve maximum efficiency. Despite the extra complexity, bipropellant rockets are still one of the preferred systems for primary propulsion
ROCKET PROPULSION
Isaac Newton stated in his third law of motion that "for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction." It is upon this principle that a rocket operates. Propellants are combined in a combustion chamber where they chemically react to form hot gases which are then accelerated and ejected at high velocity through a nozzle, thereby imparting momentum to the engine. The thrust force of a rocket motor is the reaction experienced by the motor structure due to ejection of the high velocity matter. This is the same phenomenon which pushes a garden hose backward as water flows from the nozzle, or makes a gun recoil when fired.
Thrust
Thrust is the force that propels a rocket or spacecraft and is measured in pounds, kilograms or Newtons. Physically speaking, it is the result of pressure which is exerted on the wall of the combustion chamber. The figure to the right shows a combustion chamber with an opening, the nozzle, through which gas can escape. The pressure distribution within the chamber is asymmetric; that is, inside the chamber the pressure varies little, but near the nozzle it decreases somewhat. The force due to gas pressure on the bottom of the chamber is not compensated for from the outside. The resultant force F due to the internal and external pressure difference, the thrust, is opposite to the direction of the gas jet. It pushes the chamber upwards. To create high speed exhaust gases, the necessary high temperatures and pressures of combustion are obtained by using a very energetic fuel and by having the molecular weight of the exhaust gases as low as possible. It is also necessary to reduce the pressure of the gas as much as possible inside the nozzle by creating a large section ratio. The section ratio, or expansion ratio, is defined as the area of the exit Ae divided by the area of the throat At.
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The thrust F is the resultant of the forces due to the pressures exerted on the inner and outer walls by the combustion gases and the surrounding atmosphere, taking the boundary between the inner and outer surfaces as the cross section of the exit of the nozzle. As we shall see in the next section, applying the principle of the conservation of momentum gives
where q is the rate of the ejected mass flow, Pa the pressure of the ambient atmosphere, Pe the pressure of the exhaust gases and Ve their ejection speed. Thrust is specified either at sea level or in a vacuum.
Conservation of Momentum
The linear momentum (p), or simply momentum, of a particle is the product of its mass and its velocity. That is,
Newton expressed his second law of motion in terms of momentum, which can be stated as "the resultant of the forces acting on a particle is equal to the rate of change of the linear momentum of the particle". In symbolic form this becomes
which is equivalent to the expression F=ma. If we have a system of particles, the total momentum P of the system is the sum of the momenta of the individual particles. When the resultant external force acting on a system is zero, the total linear momentum of the system remains constant. This is called the principle of conservation of linear momentum. Let's now see how this principle is applied to rocket mechanics. Consider a rocket drifting in gravity free space. The rocket's engine is fired for time t and, during this period, ejects gases at a constant rate and at a constant speed relative to the rocket (exhaust velocity). Assume there are no external forces, such as gravity or air resistance. The figure below-left (a) shows the situation at time t. The rocket and fuel have a total mass M and the combination is moving with velocity v as seen from a particular frame of reference. At a time t later the configuration has changed to that shown below-right (b). A mass M has been ejected from the rocket and is moving with velocity u as seen by the observer. The rocket is reduced to mass M- M and the velocity v of the rocket is changed to v+ v.
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Because there are no external forces, dP/dt=0. We can write, for the time interval
where P2 is the final system momentum, figure (b), and P1 is the initial system momentum, figure (a). We write
If we let t approach zero, v/ t approaches dv/dt, the acceleration of the body. The quantity M is the mass ejected in t; this leads to a decrease in the mass M of the original body. Since dM/dt, the change in mass of the body with time, is negative in this case, in the limit the quantity M/ t is replaced by -dM/dt. The quantity u-(v+ v) is Vrel, the relative velocity of the ejected mass with respect to the rocket. With these changes, equation (1.4) can be written as
The right-hand term depends on the characteristics of the rocket and, like the left-hand term, has the dimensions of a force. This force is called the thrust, and is the reaction force exerted on the rocket by the mass that leaves it. The rocket designer can make the thrust as large as possible by designing the rocket to eject mass as rapidly as possible (dM/dt large) and with the highest possible relative speed (Vrel large). In rocketry, the basic thrust equation is written as
where q is the rate of the ejected mass flow, Ve is the exhaust gas ejection speed, Pe is the pressure of the exhaust gases at the nozzle exit, Pa is the pressure of the ambient atmosphere, and Ae is the area of the nozzle exit. The product qVe, which we derived above (Vrel x dM/dt), is called the momentum, or velocity, thrust. The product (Pe-Pa)Ae, called the pressure thrust, is the result of unbalanced pressure forces at the nozzle exit. As we shall see latter, maximum thrust occurs when Pe=Pa.
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PROBLEM 1.1
A spacecraft's engine ejects mass at a rate of 30 kg/s with an exhaust velocity of 3,100 m/s. The pressure at the nozzle exit is 5 kPa and the exit area is 0.7 m2. What is the thrust of the engine in a vacuum?
SOLUTION,
Given: q = 30 kg/s Ve = 3,100 m/s Ae = 0.7 m2 Pe = 5 kPa = 5,000 N/m2 Pa = 0
Equation (1.6) may be simplified by the definition of an effective exhaust gas velocity, C, defined as
Multiplying both sides by dt and integrating from a time t1 to a time t2, we write
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The integral is a vector known as the linear impulse, or simply the impulse, of the force F during the time interval considered. The equation expresses that, when a particle is acted upon by a force F during a given time interval, the final momentum p2 of the particle may be obtained by adding its initial momentum p1 and the impulse of the force F during the interval of time. When several forces act on a particle, the impulse of each of the forces must be considered. When a problem involves a system of particles, we may add vectorially the momenta of all the particles and the impulses of all the forces involved. When can then write
Let us now see how we can apply the principle of impulse and momentum to rocket mechanics. Consider a rocket of initial mass M which it launched vertically at time t=0. The fuel is consumed at a constant rate q and is expelled at a constant speed Ve relative to the rocket. At time t, the mass of the rocket shell and remaining fuel is M-qt, and the velocity is v. During the time interval t, a mass of fuel q t is expelled. Denoting by u the absolute velocity of the expelled fuel, we apply the principle of impulse and momentum between time t and time t+ t. Please note, this derivation neglects the effect of air resistance.
We write
We divide through by t and replace u-(v+ v) with Ve, the velocity of the expelled mass relative to the rocket. As t approaches zero, we obtain
Separating variables and integrating from t=0, v=0 to t=t, v=v, we obtain
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which equals
The term -gt in equation (1.15) is the result of Earth's gravity pulling on the rocket. For a rocket drifting in space, -gt is not applicable and can be omitted. Furthermore, it is more appropriate to express the resulting velocity as a change in velocity, or V. Equation (1.15) thus becomes
PROBLEM 1.2
The spacecraft in problem 1.1 has an initial mass of 30,000 kg. change in velocity if the spacecraft burns its engine for one minute? What is the
SOLUTION,
Given: M = 30,000 kg q = 30 kg/s Ve = 3,100 m/s t = 60 s
Equation (1.16), V = Ve x LN[ M / (M - qt) ] V = 3,100 x LN[ 30,000 / (30,000 - (30 x 60)) ] V = 192 m/s
Note that M represents the initial mass of the rocket and M-qt the final mass. Therefore, equation (1.16) is often written as
where mo/mf is called the mass ratio. Equation (1.17) is also known as Tsiolkovsky's rocket equation, named after Russian rocket pioneer Konstantin E. Tsiolkovsky (1857-1935) who first derived it. In practical application, the variable Ve is usually replaced by the effective exhaust gas velocity, C. Equation (1.17) therefore becomes
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PROBLEM 1.3
A spacecraft's dry mass is 75,000 kg and the effective exhaust gas velocity of its main engine is 3,100 m/s. How much propellant must be carried if the propulsion system is to produce a total v of 700 m/s?
SOLUTION,
Given: Mf = 75,000 kg C = 3,100 m/s V = 700 m/s
Equation (1.20), Mo = Mf x e^( V / C) Mo = 75,000 x e^(700 / 3,100) Mo = 94,000 kg Propellant mass, Mp = Mo - Mf Mp = 94,000 - 75,000 Mp = 19,000 kg For many spacecraft maneuvers it is necessary to calculate the duration of an engine burn required to achieve a specific change in velocity. Rearranging variables, we have
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PROBLEM 1.4
A 5,000 kg spacecraft is in Earth orbit traveling at a velocity of 7,790 m/s. Its engine is burned to accelerate it to a velocity of 12,000 m/s placing it on an escape trajectory. The engine expels mass at a rate of 10 kg/s and an effective velocity of 3,000 m/s. Calculate the duration of the burn.
SOLUTION,
Given: M = 5,000 kg q = 10 kg/s C = 3,000 m/s V = 12,000 - 7,790 = 4,210 m/s
The optimum mixture ratio is typically that which will deliver the highest engine performance (measured by specific impulse), however in some situations a different O/F ratio results in a better overall system. For a volume-constrained vehicle with a low-density fuel such as liquid hydrogen, significant reductions in vehicle size can be achieved by shifting to a higher O/F ratio. In that case, the losses in performance are more than compensated for by the reduced fuel tankage requirement. Also consider the example of bipropellant systems using NTO/MMH, where a mixture ratio of 1.67 results in fuel and oxidizer tanks of equal size. Equal sizing simplifies tank manufacturing, system packaging, and integration. As we have seen previously, impulse thrust is equal to the product of the propellant mass flow rate and the exhaust gas ejection speed. The ideal exhaust velocity is given by
where k is the specific heat ratio, R' is the universal gas constant (8,314.51 N-m/kg mol-K in SI units, or 49,720 ft-lb/slug mol-oR in U.S. units), Tc is the combustion temperature, M is the average molecular weight of the exhaust gases, Pc is the combustion chamber pressure, and Pe is the pressure at the nozzle exit. Specific heat ratio(2) varies depending on the composition and temperature of the exhaust gases, but it is usually about 1.2. The thermodynamics involved in calculating combustion temperatures are quite complicated, however, flame temperatures generally range from about 2,500 to 3,600 oC (4,500-6,500 oF). Chamber pressures can range from about about 7 to 250 atmospheres. Pe should be equal to the ambient pressure at which the engine will operate, more on this later. See below the charts providing optimum mixture ratio, adiabatic flame temperature, gas molecular weight, and specific heat ratio for some common rocket propellants. From equation (1.22) we see that high chamber temperature and pressure, and low exhaust gas molecular weight results in high ejection velocity, thus high thrust. Based on this criterion, we can see why liquid hydrogen is very desirable as a rocket fuel.
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Molecular weight equals the sum of the atomic weights of the atoms in the molecule. For NaCl, the atomic weight of sodium is 23, of chlorine is 35 and a molecule contains one sodium and one chlorine, so 23 + 35 = 58, the molecular weight of NaCl. The formula for glucose ( a very common sugar) is C6H12O6. The subscripts to the right mean that it contains 6 atoms of carbon, 12 atoms of hydrogen, and 6 atoms of oxygen. The atomic weight for carbon is 12, for hydrogen is 1, and for oxygen is 16, so the molecular weight of glucose can be calculated thus: ---------------------------------------------------------Element Atomic Weight No. of Atoms Total Weight ----------------------------------------------------------C 12 6 6 12 = 72 H 1 12 12 1 = 12 O 16 6 6 16 = 96
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PROBLEM 1.5
A rocket engine burning liquid oxygen and kerosene operates at a mixture ratio of 2.26 and a combustion chamber pressure of 50 atmospheres. If the
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where F is thrust, q is the rate of mass flow, and g is the acceleration of gravity at ground level. Specific impulse is expressed in seconds. When the thrust and the flow rate remain constant throughout the burning of the propellant, the specific impulse is the time for which the rocket engine provides a thrust equal to the weight of the propellant consumed. For a given engine, the specific impulse has different values on the ground and in the vacuum of space because the ambient pressure is involved in the expression for the thrust. It is therefore important to state whether specific impulse is the value at sea level or in a vacuum. There are a number of losses within a rocket engine, the main ones being related to the inefficiency of the chemical reaction (combustion) process, losses due to the nozzle, and losses due to the pumps. Overall, the losses affect the efficiency of the specific impulse. This is the ratio of the real specific impulse (at sea level, or in a vacuum) and the theoretical specific impulse obtained with an ideal nozzle from gases coming from a complete chemical reaction. Calculated values of specific impulse are several percent higher than those attained in practice.
PROBLEM 1.6
A rocket engine produces a thrust of 1,000 kN at sea level with a propellant flow rate of 400 kg/s. Calculate the specific impulse.
SOLUTION,
Given: F = 1,000,000 N q = 400 kg/s
Equation (1.23), Isp = F / (q x g) Isp = 1,000,000 / (400 x 9.80665) Isp = 255 s (sea level)
From Equation (1.8) we can substitute qC for F in Equation (1.23), thus obtaining
Equation (1.24) is very useful when solving Equations (1.18) through (1.21). It is rare we are given the value of C directly, however rocket engine specific impulse is a commonly given parameter from which we can easily calculate C.
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The figure above-right shows three different exhaust nozzles. The most efficient nozzle (1) is contoured to the exhaust stream, allowing the escaping gas to expand just enough to fill the nozzle. A nozzle that lets the gas expand too much (2), or too little (3), wastes the energy and thrust potential of the exhaust system. The nozzle throat area, At, can be found if the total propellant flow rate is known and the propellants and operating conditions have been selected. Assuming perfect gas law theory, we have
where q is the propellant mass flow rate, Pt is the gas pressure at the nozzle throat, Tt is the gas temperature at the nozzle throat, R' is the universal gas constant, and k is the specific heat ratio. Pt and Tt are given by
where Pc is the combustion chamber pressure and Tc is the combustion chamber flame temperature.
PROBLEM 1.7
A rocket engine uses the same propellant, mixture ratio, and combustion chamber pressure as that in problem 1.5. If the propellant flow rate is 500 kg/s, calculate the area of the exhaust nozzle throat.
SOLUTION,
Given: Pc = 50 x 0.101325 = 5.066 MPa Tc = 3,470<SUP.O< sup> K M = 21.40 k = 1.221 q = 500 kg/s
Equation (1.26), Pt = Pc x [1 + (k - 1) / 2]-k/(k-1) Pt = 5.066 x [1 + (1.221 - 1) / 2]-1.221/(1.221-1) Pt = 2.839 MPa = 2.839x106 N/m2
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Equation (1.27), Tt = Tc / (1 + (k - 1) / 2) Tt = 3,470 / (1 + (1.221 - 1) / 2) Tt = 3,125 K Equation (1.25), At = (q / Pt) x SQRT[ (R' x Tt) / (M x k) ] At = (500 / 2.839x106) x SQRT[ (8,314.51 x 3,125) / (21.40 x 1.221) ] At = 0.1756 m2 The hot gases must be expanded in the diverging section of the nozzle to obtain maximum thrust. The pressure of these gases will decrease as energy is used to accelerate the gas. We must find that area of the nozzle where the gas pressure is equal to the outside atmospheric pressure. This area will then be the nozzle exit area. Mach number Nm is the ratio of the gas velocity to the local speed of sound. The Mach number at the nozzle exit is given by the perfect gas expansion expression
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Equation (1.28), Nm2 = (2 / (k - 1)) x [(Pc / Pa)(k-1)/k - 1] Nm2 = (2 / (1.221 - 1)) x [(5.066 / 0.0795)(1.221-1)/1.221 - 1] Nm2 = 10.15 Nm = (10.15)1/2 = 3.185 Equation (1.29), Ae = (At / Nm) x [(1 + (k - 1) / 2 x Nm2)/((k + 1) / 2)](k+1)/(2(k-1)) Ae = (0.1756 / 3.185) x [(1 + (1.221 - 1) / 2 x 10.15)/((1.221 + 1) / 2)](1.221+1)/(2(1.221-1)) Ae = 1.426 m2 Section Ratio, Ae / At = 1.426 / 0.1756 = 8.12
For launch vehicles (particularly first stages) where the ambient pressure varies during the burn period, trajectory computations are performed to determine the optimum exit pressure. However, an additional constraint is the maximum allowable diameter for the nozzle exit cone, which in some cases is the limiting constraint. This is especially true on stages other than the first, where the nozzle diameter may not be larger than the outer diameter of the stage below. For space engines, where the ambient pressure is zero, thrust always increases as nozzle expansion ratio increases. On these engines, the nozzle expansion ratio is generally increased until the additional weight of the longer nozzle costs more performance than the extra thrust it generates.
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F = q x Ve + (Pe - Pa) x Ae where F = Thrust q = Propellant mass flow rate Ve = Velocity of exhaust gases Pe = Pressure at nozzle exit Pa = Ambient pressure Ae = Area of nozzle exit The product qVe is called the momentum, or velocity, thrust and the product (Pe-Pa)Ae is called the pressure thrust. As we have seen, Ve and Pe are inversely proportional, that is, as one increases the other decreases. If a nozzle is under-extended we have Pe>Pa and Ve is small. For an over-extended nozzle we have Pe<Pa and Ve is large. Thus, momentum thrust and pressure thrust are inversely proportional and, as we shall see, maximum thrust occurs when Pe=Pa. Let us now consider an example. Assume we have a rocket engine equipped with an extendible nozzle. The engine is test fired in an environment with a constant ambient pressure. During the burn, the nozzle is extended from its fully retracted position to its fully extended position. At some point between fully retracted and fully extended Pe=Pa (see figure below).
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The gas pressure and temperature at the nozzle throat is less than in the combustion chamber due to the loss of thermal energy in accelerating the gas to the local speed of sound at the throat. Therefore, we calculate the pressure and temperature at the nozzle throat, Pt = Pc x [1 + (k - 1) / 2] -1.20/(1.20-1) Pt = 5 x [1 + (1.20 - 1) / 2] 6 2 Pt = 2.82 MPa = 2.82x10 N/m Tt = Tc x [1 / (1 + (k - 1) / 2)] Tt = 3,600 x [1 / (1 + (1.20 - 1) / 2)] Tt = 3,273 K The area at the nozzle throat is given by At = (q / Pt) x SQRT[ (R' x Tt) / (M x k) ] 6 At = (100 / 2.82x10 ) x SQRT[ (8,314 x 3,273) / (24 x 1.20) ] 2 At = 0.0345 m The hot gases must now be expanded in the diverging section of the nozzle to obtain maximum thrust. The Mach number at the nozzle exit is given by Nm2 = Nm2 = Nm = Nm =
2 -k/(k-1)
(2 / (k - 1)) x [(Pc / Pa) - 1] (1.20-1)/1.20 (2 / (1.20 - 1)) x [(5 / 0.05) - 1] 11.54 1/2 = 3.40 (11.54)
(k-1)/k
The nozzle exit area corresponding to the exit Mach number is given by Ae = (At / Nm) x [(1 + (k - 1) / 2 x Nm )/((k + 1) / 2)] Ae = (0.0345 / 3.40) x [(1 + (1.20 - 1) / 2 x 11.54)/((1.20 + 1) / (1.20+1)/(2(1.20-1)) Ae = 0.409 m
2 2 (k+1)/(2(k-1))
2)]
The velocity of the exhaust gases at the nozzle exit is given by ) ] Ve = SQRT[ (2 x k / (k - 1)) x (R' x Tc / M) x (1 - (Pe / Pc) Ve = SQRT[ (2 x 1.20 / (1.20 1)) x (8,314 x 3,600 / 24) x (1 - (0.05 / (1.20-1)/1.20 5) ) ] Ve = 2,832 m/s Finally, we calculate the thrust, F = q x Ve + (Pe - Pa) x Ae 6 6 F = 100 x 2,832 + (0.05x10 - 0.05x10 ) x 0.409 F = 283,200 N
(k-1)/k
Let's now consider what happens when the nozzle is under-extended, that is Pe>Pa. If we assume Pe=Pa x 2, we have Pe = 0.05 x 2 = 0.10 MPa At = 0.0345 m
2 2
(1.20-1)/1.20
- 1]
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Power Cycles
Liquid bipropellant rocket engines can be categorized according to their power cycles, that is, how power is derived to feed propellants to the main combustion chamber. Described below are some of the more common types. Gas-generator cycle: The gas-generator cycle, also called open cycle, taps off a small amount of fuel and oxidizer from the main flow (typically 3 to 7 percent) to feed a burner called a gas generator. The hot gas from this generator passes through a turbine to generate power for the pumps that send propellants to the combustion chamber. The hot gas is then either dumped overboard or sent into the main nozzle downstream. Increasing the flow of propellants into the gas generator increases the speed of the turbine, which increases the flow of propellants into the main combustion chamber, and hence, the amount of thrust produced. The gas generator must burn propellants at a less-than-optimal mixture ratio to keep the temperature low for the turbine blades. Thus, the cycle is appropriate for moderate power requirements but not high-power systems, which would have to divert a large portion of the main flow to the less efficient gas-generator flow. As in most rocket engines, some of the propellant in a gas generator cycle is used to cool the nozzle and combustion chamber, increasing efficiency and allowing higher engine temperature.
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can achieve higher chamber pressures than the closed expander cycle although at lower efficiency because of the overboard flow.
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Regenerative cooling is the most widely used method of cooling a thrust chamber and is accomplished by flowing high-velocity coolant over the back side of the chamber hot gas wall to convectively cool the hot gas liner. The coolant with the heat input from cooling the liner is then discharged into the injector and utilized as a propellant. Earlier thrust chamber designs, such as the V-2 and Redstone, had low chamber pressure, low heat flux and low coolant pressure requirements, which could be satisfied by a simplified "double wall chamber" design with regenerative and film cooling. For subsequent rocket engine applications, however, chamber pressures were increased and the cooling requirements became more difficult to satisfy. It became necessary to design new coolant configurations that were more efficient structurally and had improved heat transfer characteristics. This led to the design of "tubular wall" thrust chambers, by far the most widely used design approach for the vast majority of large rocket engine applications. These chamber designs have been successfully used for the Thor, Jupiter, Atlas, H-1, J-2, F-1, RS-27 and several other Air Force and NASA rocket engine applications. The primary advantage of the design is its light weight and the large experience base that has accrued. But as chamber pressures and hot gas wall heat fluxes have continued to increase (>100 atm), still more effective methods have been needed. One solution has been "channel wall" thrust chambers, so named because the hot gas wall cooling is accomplished by flowing coolant through rectangular channels, which are machined or formed into a hot gas liner fabricated from a high-conductivity material, such as copper or a copper alloy. A prime example of a channel wall combustion chamber is the SSME, which operates at 204 atmospheres nominal chamber pressure at 3,600 K for a duration of 520 seconds. Heat transfer and structural characteristics are excellent. In addition to the regeneratively cooled designs mentioned above, other thrust chamber designs have been fabricated for rocket engines using dump cooling, film cooling, transpiration cooling, ablative liners and radiation cooling. Although regeneratively cooled combustion chambers have proven to be the best approach for cooling large liquid rocket engines, other methods of cooling have also been successfully used for cooling thrust chamber assemblies. Examples include: Dump cooling, which is similar to regenerative cooling because the coolant flows through small passages over the back side of the thrust chamber wall. The difference, however, is that after cooling the thrust chamber, the coolant is discharged overboard through openings at the aft end of the divergent nozzle. This method has limited application because of the performance loss resulting from dumping the coolant overboard. To date, dump cooling has not been used in an actual application.
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Film cooling provides protection from excessive heat by introducing a thin film of coolant or propellant through orifices around the injector periphery or through manifolded orifices in the chamber wall near the injector or chamber throat region. This method is typically used in high heat flux regions and in combination with regenerative cooling. Transpiration cooling provides coolant (either gaseous or liquid propellant) through a porous chamber wall at a rate sufficient to maintain the chamber hot gas wall to the desired temperature. The technique is really a special case of film cooling. With ablative cooling, combustion gas-side wall material is sacrificed by melting, vaporization and chemical changes to dissipate heat. As a result, relatively cool gases flow over the wall surface, thus lowering the boundary-layer temperature and assisting the cooling process. With radiation cooling, heat is radiated from the outer surface of the combustion chamber or nozzle extension wall. Radiation cooling is typically used for small thrust chambers with a high-temperature wall material (refractory) and in low-heat flux regions, such as a nozzle extension.
The shape of the fuel block for a rocket is chosen for the particular type of mission it will perform. Since the combustion of the block progresses from its free surface, as this surface grows, geometrical considerations determine whether the thrust increases, decreases or stays constant.
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Burn Rate The burning surface of a rocket propellant grain recedes in a direction perpendicular to this burning surface. The rate of regression, typically measured in millimeters per second (or inches per second), is termed burn rate. This rate can differ significantly for different propellants, or for one particular propellant, depending on various operating conditions as well as formulation. Knowing quantitatively the burning rate of a propellant, and how it changes under various conditions, is of fundamental importance in the successful design of a solid rocket motor. Propellant burning rate is influenced by certain factors, the most significant being: combustion chamber pressure, initial temperature of the propellant grain, velocity of the combustion gases flowing parallel to the burning surface, local static pressure, and motor acceleration and spin. These factors are discussed below. Burn rate is profoundly affected by chamber pressure. The usual representation of the pressure dependence on burn rate is the Saint-R
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a grain L/D ratio of 6. A greater Aport/At ratio should be used for grains with larger L/D ratios. In an operating rocket motor, there is a pressure drop along the axis of the combustion chamber, a drop that is physically necessary to accelerate the increasing mass flow of combustion products toward the nozzle. The static pressure is greatest where gas flow is zero, that is, at the front of the motor. Since burn rate is dependant upon the local pressure, the rate should be greatest at this location. However, this effect is relatively minor and is usually offset by the counter-effect of erosive burning. Burning rate is enhanced by acceleration of the motor. Whether the acceleration is a result of longitudinal force (e.g. thrust) or spin, burning surfaces that form an angle of about 60-90o with the acceleration vector are prone to increased burn rate.
It is sometimes desirable to modify the burning rate such that it is more suitable to a certain grain configuration. For example, if one wished to design an end burner grain, which has a relatively small burning area, it is necessary to have a fast burning propellant. In other circumstances, a reduced burning rate may be sought after. For example, a motor may have a large L/D ratio to generate sufficiently high thrust, or it may be necessary for a particular design to restrict the diameter of the motor. The web would be consequently thin, resulting in short burn duration. Reducing the burning rate would be beneficial. There are a number of ways of modifying the burning rate: decrease the oxidizer particle size, increase or reduce the percentage of oxidizer, adding a burn rate catalyst or suppressant, and operate the motor at a lower or higher chamber pressure. These factors are discussed below. The effect of the oxidizer particle size on burn rate seems to be influenced by the type of oxidizer. Propellants that use ammonium perchlorate (AP) as the oxidizer have a burn rate that is significantly affected by AP particle size. This most likely results from the decomposition of AP being the rate-determining step in the combustion process. The burn rate of most propellants is strongly influenced by the oxidizer/fuel ratio. Unfortunately, modifying the burn rate by this means is quite restrictive, as the performance of the propellant, as well as mechanical properties, are also greatly affected by the O/F ratio. Certainly the best and most effective means of increasing the burn rate is the addition of a catalyst to the propellant mixture. A catalyst is a chemical compound that is added in small quantities for the sole purpose of tailoring the burning rate. A burn rate suppressant is an additive that has the opposite effect to that of a catalyst -- it is used to decrease the burn rate. For a propellant that follows the Saint-Robert's burn rate law, designing a rocket motor to operate at a lower chamber pressure will provide for a lower burning rate. Due to the nonlinearity of the pressure-burn rate relationship, it may be necessary to significantly reduce the operating pressure to get the desired burning rate. The obvious drawback is reduced motor performance, as specific impulse similarly decays with reducing chamber pressure.
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Product Generation Rate The rate at which combustion products are generated is expressed in terms of the regression speed of the grain. The product generation rate integrated over the port surface area is
where q is the combustion product generation rate at the propellant surface, p is the solid propellant density, Ab is the area of the burning surface, and r is the propellant burn rate. It is important to note that the combustion products may consist of both gaseous and condensed-phase mass. The condensed-phase, which manifests itself as smoke, may be either solid or liquid particles. Only the gaseous products contribute to pressure development. The condensed-phase certainly does, however, contribute to the thrust of the rocket motor, due to its mass and velocity.
PROBLEM 1.9
A solid rocket motor burns along the face of a central cylindrical channel 10 meters long and 1 meter in diameter. The propellant has a burn rate coefficient of 5.5, a pressure exponent of 0.4, and a density of 1.77 g/ml. Calculate the burn rate and the product generation rate when the chamber pressure is 5.0 MPa.
SOLUTION,
Given: a = 5.5 n = 0.4 Pc = 5.0 MPa p = 1.77 g/ml Ab = x 1 x 10 = 31.416 m2
Equation (1.30), r = a x Pcn r = 5.5 x 5.00.4 = 10.47 mm/s Equation (1.31), q = p x Ab x r q = 1.77 x 31.416 x 10. 3
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with associated burn rate variation. Other factors may play a role, however, such as nozzle throat erosion and erosive burn rate augmentation.
Monopropellant Engines
By far the most widely used type of propulsion for spacecraft attitude and velocity control is monopropellant hydrazine. Its excellent handling characteristics, relative stability under normal storage conditions, and clean decomposition products have made it the standard. The general sequence of operations in a hydrazine thruster is: When the attitude control system signals for thruster operation, an electric solenoid valve opens allowing hydrazine to flow. The action may be pulsed (as short as 5 ms) or long duration (steady state). The pressure in the propellant tank forces liquid hydrazine into the injector. It enters as a spray into the thrust chamber and contacts the catalyst beds. The catalyst bed consists of alumina pellets impregnated with iridium. Incoming hydrazine heats to its vaporizing point by contact with the catalyst bed and with the hot gases leaving the catalyst particles. The temperature of the hydrazine rises to a point where the rate of its decomposition becomes so high that the chemical reactions are self-sustaining. By controlling the flow variables and the geometry of the catalyst chamber, a designer can tailor the proportion of chemical products, the exhaust temperature, the molecular weight, and thus the enthalpy for a given application. For a thruster application where specific impulse is paramount, the designer attempts to provide 30-40% ammonia dissociation, which is about the lowest percentage that can be maintained reliably. For gas-generator application, where lower temperature gases are usually desired, the designer provides for higher levels of ammonia dissociation. Finally, in a space thruster, the hydrazine decomposition products leave the catalyst bed and exit from the chamber through a high expansion ratio exhaust nozzle to produce thrust.
Monopropellant hydrazine thrusters typically produce a specific impulse of about 230 to 240 seconds. Other suitable propellants for catalytic decomposition engines are hydrogen peroxide and nitrous oxide, however the performance is considerably lower than that obtained with hydrazine - specific impulse of about 150 s with H2O2 and about 170 s with N2O. Monopropellant systems have successfully provided orbit maintenance and attitude control functions, but lack the performance to provide weight-efficient large V maneuvers required for orbit insertion. Bipropellant systems are attractive because they can provide all three functions with one higher performance system, but they are more complex than the common solid rocket and monopropellant combined systems. A third alternative are dual mode systems. These systems are hybrid designs that use hydrazine both as a fuel for high performance bipropellant engines and as a monopropellant with conventional low-thrust catalytic thrusters. The hydrazine is fed to both the bipropellant engines and the monopropellant thrusters from a common fuel tank. Cold gas propulsion is just a controlled, pressurized gas source and a nozzle. It represents the simplest form of rocket engine. Cold gas has many applications where simplicity and/or
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the need to avoid hot gases are more important than high performance. The Manned Maneuvering Unit used by astronauts is an example of such a system.
Staging
Multistage rockets allow improved payload capability for vehicles with a high V requirement such as launch vehicles or interplanetary spacecraft. In a multistage rocket, propellant is stored in smaller, separate tanks rather than a larger single tank as in a singlestage rocket. Since each tank is discarded when empty, energy is not expended to accelerate the empty tanks, so a higher total V is obtained. Alternatively, a larger payload mass can be accelerated to the same total V. For convenience, the separate tanks are usually bundled with their own engines, with each discardable unit called a stage. Multistage rocket performance is described by the same rocket equation as single-stage rockets, but must be determined on a stage-by-stage basis. The velocity increment, Vi, for each stage is calculated as before,
where moi represents the total vehicle mass when stage i is ignited, and mfi is the total vehicle mass when stage i is burned out but not yet discarded. It is important to realize that the payload mass for any stage consists of the mass of all subsequent stages plus the ultimate payload itself. The velocity increment for the vehicle is then the sum of those for the individual stages where n is the total number of stages.
PROBLEM 1.10
A two-stage rocket has the following masses: 1st-stage propellant mass 120,000 kg, 1st-stage dry mass 9,000 kg, 2nd-stage propellant mass 30,000 kg, 2nd-stage dry mass 3,000 kg, and payload mass 3,000 kg. The specific impulses of the 1st and 2nd stages are 260 s and 320 s respectively. Calculate the rocket's total V.
SOLUTION,
Given: Mo1 = 120,000 + 9,000 + 30,000 + 3,000 + 3,000 = 165,000 kg Mf1 = 9,000 + 30,000 + 3,000 + 3,000 = 45,000 kg Isp1 = 260 s Mo2 = 30,000 + 3,000 + 3,000 = 36,000 kg Mf2 = 3,000 + 3,000 = 6,000 kg Isp2 = 320 s
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C1 = Isp1g C1 = 260 x 9.80665 = 2,550 m/s C2 = Isp2g C2 = 320 x 9.80665 = 3,138 m/s Equation (1.33), V1 = C1 x LN[ Mo1 / Mf1 ] V1 = 2,550 x LN[ 165,000 / 45,000 ] V1 = 3,313 m/s V2 = C2 x LN[ Mo2 / Mf2 ] V2 = 3,138 x LN[ 36,000 / 6,000 ] V2 = 5,623 m/s Equation (1.34), VTotal = V1 + V2 VTotal = 3,313 + 5,623 VTotal = 8,936 m/s
We define the payload fraction as the ratio of payload mass to initial mass, or mpl/mo. For a multistage vehicle with dissimilar stages, the overall vehicle payload fraction depends on how the V requirement is partitioned among stages. Payload fractions will be reduced if the V is partitioned suboptimally. The optimal distribution may be determined by trial and error. A V distribution is postulated and the resulting payload fraction calculated. The V distribution is varied until the payload fraction is maximized. Once the V distribution is selected, vehicle sizing is accomplished by starting with the uppermost or final stage (whose payload is the actual deliverable payload) and calculating the initial mass of this assembly. This assembly then forms the payload for the previous stage and the process repeats until V all stages are sized. Results reveal that to maximize payload fraction for a given requirement: 1. Stages with higher Isp should be above stages 2. More V should be provided by the stages with 3. Each succeeding stage should be smaller than 4. Similar stages should provide the same V. with the its lower Isp. higher Isp. predecessor.
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Nozzles
Nozzles for solid propellant rockets can be classified into five categories. 1. Fixed nozzle; simple and used in small missiles 2. Movable nozzle : provide thrust vector control for the flight. 3. Submerged nozzle: it reduces the overall motor length by inserting the significant portion of the nozzle structure into the combustion chamber. 4. Extendible nozzle: it improves specific impulse. Nozzle area ratio is enlarged by mechanically adding a nozzle cone extension piece. 5. Blast-Tube-Mounted nozzle: Used in missiles. The blast tube allows the rocket motors center of gravity (CG) to be close to or ahead of the vehicle CG. This limits the CG travel during motor burn and makes flight stabilization much easier. Design and Construction Almost all solid rocket nozzles are ablatively cooled. The general construction of a solid rocket nozzle features steel or aluminium shells (housings) that are designed to carry structural loads (motor operating pressure and nozzle TVC actuator load are the biggest), and composite ablative liners which are bonded to the housings. Solid rocket nozzles are designed to ensure that the thickness of ablative liners is sufficient to maintain the liner-tohousing adhesive bond line below the temperature that would degrade the adhesive structural properties during the motor operation. The construction of nozzle ranges from simple single-piece non-movable graphite nozzles to complex multipiece nozzles capable of moving to control the direction of the thrust vector. Igniter hardware There are generally two types: Pyrotechnic igniters and pyrogen igniters.
In industrial practice, pyrotechnic igniters are defined as igniters using solid explosives or energetic propellant-likw chemical formulations (usually small pellets of propellant which give a large burning surface and a short burning time) as the heat-producing material.
Pyrogen igniter is basically a small rocket motor that is used to ignite a large rocket motor. The pyrogen is not designed to produce thrust. All use one or more nozzle orifices, both sonic and supersonic types, and most use conventional rocket motor gra8 0 Td [(a)3.15789(t)-2.53658(
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ROCKET PROPELLANTS
Propellant is the chemical mixture burned to produce thrust in rockets and consists of a fuel and an oxidizer. A fuel is a substance which burns when combined with oxygen producing gas for propulsion. An oxidizer is an agent that releases oxygen for combination with a fuel. The ratio of oxidizer to fuel is called the mixture ratio. Propellants are classified according to their state - liquid, solid, or hybrid. The gauge for rating the efficiency of rocket propellants is specific impulse, stated in seconds. Specific impulse indicates how many pounds (or kilograms) of thrust are obtained by the consumption of one pound (or kilogram) of propellant in one second. Specific impulse is characteristic of the type of propellant, however, its exact value will vary to some extent with the operating conditions and design of the rocket engine.
Liquid Propellants
In a liquid propellant rocket, the fuel and oxidizer are stored in separate tanks, and are fed through a system of pipes, valves, and turbopumps to a combustion chamber where they are combined and burned to produce thrust. Liquid propellant engines are more complex than their solid propellant counterparts, however, they offer several advantages. By controlling the flow of propellant to the combustion chamber, the engine can be throttled, stopped, or restarted. A good liquid propellant is one with a high specific impulse or, stated another way, one with a high speed of exhaust gas ejection. This implies a high combustion temperature and exhaust gases with small molecular weights. However, there is another important factor which must be taken into consideration: the density of the propellant. Using low density propellants means that larger storage tanks will be required, thus increasing the mass of the launch vehicle. Storage temperature is also important. A propellant with a low storage temperature, i.e. a cryogenic, will require thermal insulation, thus further increasing the mass of the launcher. The toxicity of the propellant is likewise important. Safety hazards exist when handling, transporting, and storing highly toxic compounds. Also, some propellants are very corrosive, however, materials that are resistant to certain propellants have been identified for use in rocket construction. Liquid propellants used in rocketry can be classified into three types: petroleum, cryogens, and hypergols. Petroleum fuels are those refined from crude oil and are a mixture of complex hydrocarbons, i.e. organic compounds containing only carbon and hydrogen. The petroleum used as rocket fuel is a type of highly refined kerosene, called RP-1 in the United States. Petroleum fuels are usually used in combination with liquid oxygen as the oxidizer. Kerosene delivers a specific impulse considerably less than cryogenic fuels, but it is generally better than hypergolic propellants. Specifications for RP-1 where first issued in the United States in 1957 when the need for a clean burning petroleum rocket fuel was recognized. Prior experimentation with jet fuels produced tarry residue in the engine cooling passages and excessive soot, coke and other deposits in the gas generator. Even with the new specifications, kerosene-burning engines still produce enough residues that their operational lifetimes are limited.
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Liquid oxygen and RP-1 are used as the propellant in the first-stage boosters of the Atlas and Delta II launch vehicles. It also powered the first-stages of the Saturn 1B and Saturn V rockets. Cryogenic propellants are liquefied gases stored at very low temperatures, most frequently liquid hydrogen (LH2) as the fuel and liquid oxygen (LO2 or LOX) as the oxidizer. Hydrogen remains liquid at temperatures of -253 oC (-423 oF) and oxygen remains in a liquid state at temperatures of -183 oC (-297 oF) . Because of the low temperatures of cryogenic propellants, they are difficult to store over long periods of time. For this reason, they are less desirable for use in military rockets that must be kept launch ready for months at a time. Furthermore, liquid hydrogen has a very low density (0.071 g/ml) and, therefore, requires a storage volume many times greater than other fuels. Despite these drawbacks, the high efficiency of liquid oxygen/liquid hydrogen makes these problems worth coping with when reaction time and storability are not too critical. Liquid hydrogen delivers a specific impulse about 30%-40% higher than most other rocket fuels. Liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen are used as the propellant in the high efficiency main engines of the Space Shuttle. LOX/LH2 also powered the upper stages of the Saturn V and Saturn 1B rockets, as well as the Centaur upper stage, the United States' first LOX/LH2 rocket (1962). Another cryogenic fuel with desirable properties for space propulsion systems is liquid methane (-162 oC). When burned with liquid oxygen, methane is higher performing than state-of-the-art storable propellants but without the volume increase common with LOX/LH2 systems, which results in an overall lower vehicle mass as compared to common hypergolic propellants. LOX/methane is also clean burning and non-toxic. Future missions to Mars will likely use methane fuel because it can be manufactured partly from Martian in-situ resources. LOX/methane has no flight history and very limited ground-test history. Liquid fluorine (-188 oC) burning engines have also been developed and fired successfully. Fluorine is not only extremely toxic; it is a super-oxidizer that reacts, usually violently, with almost everything except nitrogen, the lighter noble gases, and substances that have already been fluorinated. Despite these drawbacks, fluorine produces very impressive engine performance. It can also be mixed with liquid oxygen to improve the performance of LOX-burning engines; the resulting mixture is called FLOX. Because of fluorine's high toxicity, it has been largely abandoned by most space-faring nations. Some fluorine containing compounds, such as chlorine pentafluoride, have also been considered for use as an 'oxidizer' in deep-space applications. Hypergolic propellants are fuels and oxidizers which ignite spontaneously on contact with each other and require no ignition source. The easy start and restart capability of hypergols make them ideal for spacecraft maneuvering systems. Also, since hypergols remain liquid at normal temperatures, they do not pose the storage problems of cryogenic propellants. hypergols are highly toxic and must be handled with extreme care. Hypergolic fuels commonly include hydrazine, monomethyl hydrazine (MMH) and unsymmetrical dimethyl hydrazine (UDMH). Hydrazine gives the best performance as a rocket fuel, but it has a high freezing point and is too unstable for use as a coolant. MMH is more stable and gives the best performance when freezing point is an issue, such as
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spacecraft propulsion applications. UDMH has the lowest freezing point and has enough thermal stability to be used in large regeneratively cooled engines. Consequently, UDMH is often used in launch vehicle applications even thou
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Solid Propellants
Solid propellant motors are the simplest of all rocket designs. They consist of a casing, usually steel, filled with a mixture of solid compounds (fuel and oxidizer) which burn at a rapid rate, expelling hot gases from a nozzle to produce thrust. When ignited, a solid propellant burns from the center out towards the sides of the casing. The shape of the center channel determines the rate and pattern of the burn, thus providing a means to control thrust. Unlike liquid propellant engines, solid propellant motors can not be shut down. Once ignited, they will burn until all the propellant is exhausted. There are two families of solids propellants: homogeneous and composite. Both types are dense, stable at ordinary temperatures, and easily storable. Homogeneous propellants are either simple base or double base. A simple base propellant consists of a single compound, usually nitrocellulose, which has both an oxidation capacity and a reduction capacity. Double base propellants usually consist of nitrocellulose and nitroglycerine, to which a plasticiser is added. Homogeneous propellants do not usually have specific impulses greater than about 210 seconds under normal conditions. Their main asset is that they do not produce traceable fumes and are, therefore, commonly used in tactical weapons. They are also often used to perform subsidiary functions such as jettisoning spent parts or separating one stage from another. Modern composite propellants are heterogeneous powders (mixtures) which use a crystallized or finely ground mineral salt as an oxidizer, often ammonium perchlorate, which constitutes between 60% and 90% of the mass of the propellant. The fuel itself is generally aluminum. The propellant is held together by a polymeric binder, usually polyurethane or polybutadienes, which is also consumed as fuel. Additional compounds are sometimes included, such as a catalyst to help increase the burning rate, or other agents to make the powder easier to manufacture. The final product is rubberlike substance with the consistency of a hard rubber eraser. Composite propellants are often identified by the type of polymeric binder used. The two most common binders are polybutadiene acrylic acid acrylonitrile (PBAN) and hydroxyterminator polybutadiene (HTPB). PBAN formulations give a slightly higher specific impulse, density, and burn rate than equivalent formulations using HTPB. However, PBAN propellant is the more difficult to mix and process and requires an elevated curing temperature. HTPB binder is stronger and more flexible than PBAN binder. Both PBAN and HTPB formulations result in propellants that deliver excellent performance, have good mechanical properties, and offer potentially long burn times. Solid propellant motors have a variety of uses. Small solids often power the final stage of a launch vehicle, or attach to payloads to boost them to higher orbits. Medium solids such as the Payload Assist Module (PAM) and the Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) provide the added boost to place satellites into geosynchronous orbit or on planetary trajectories. The Titan, Delta, and Space Shuttle launch vehicles use strap-on solid propellant rockets to provide added thrust at liftoff. The Space Shuttle uses the largest solid rocket motors ever built and flown. Each booster contains 500,000 kg (1,100,000 pounds) of propellant and can produce up to 14,680,000 Newtons (3,300,000 pounds) of thrust.
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Hybrid Propellants
Hybrid propellant engines represent an intermediate group between solid and liquid propellant engines. One of the substances is solid, usually the fuel, while the other, usually the oxidizer, is liquid. The liquid is injected into the solid, whose fuel reservoir also serves as the combustion chamber. The main advantage of such engines is that they have high performance, similar to that of solid propellants, but the combustion can be moderated, stopped, or even restarted. It is difficult to make use of this concept for vary large thrusts, and thus, hybrid propellant engines are rarely VESFVE) WB05SD5)hWB05S5==E)tWBFS&EF=E)hWB=SVD0
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Hybrid Rocket Engines are those which use liquid oxidizer and a solid fuel. Below figure shows typical elements of an Hybrid Rocket Engine. The liquid oxidizer is atomized and sprayed over the fuel block. In hypergolic systems, only gas phase reactions occur. The oxidizer content of the hot product gases decreases along the port and the length of the grain. Two of the issues in this combustion process are (i) mixing of the oxidizer rich and fuel rich gases across the diffusion flame occurs much later than the length of the fuel grain and (ii) fuel regression rate is small.
The first issue is resolved by adding mixing devices and second issue is solved by adding a certain amount of oxidizer into the fuel.
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Hybrid rocket engines retain the advantage of controllability like liquid rockets. The added safety is an attraction for use of hybrid rockets in situations calling for safety similar to civil aircraft operations. There may be possibilities for their use in single stageto-orbit vehicles providing low cost access to space.
When considering different methods of propelling an aerospace vehicle, it must be realized that there is an overall hierarchy of engines that produce a desired thrust. There are air-breathing engines, which include most sub-orbital vehicles such as airplanes and jets, and then there are spacecraft engines. Among spacecraft engines there are two general types, those being electric propulsion and chemical propulsion. Electric motors are very efficient and make excellent use of fuel, but provide very little thrust. Chemical rockets, however, are powerful enough to launch payloads from the ground into orbit. In chemical rockets, the idea is to combine two substances, a fuel and an oxidizer, in some mixing region. The chemical energy associated with combining these two substances is transferred to the total flow as thermal (kinetic) energy. This high-energy flow can then be expanded out a nozzle to provide thrust for the attached vehicle. One major issue involved is apparent, for we need to what substance are best usable as oxidizer and fuel. However, the even larger question is : what is the best way to mix the fuel and oxidizer? The two long-standing answers to this question involve liquid and solid rockets. However, a third response to this question seems to be feasible these days, and that answer involves hybrid rockets. To review, liquid rockets utilize liquid fuel and liquid oxidizer stored in tanks. By either pressure feeding or by mechanically pumping the propellants from their tanks, they are forced into a mixing chamber where chemical combustion occurs. These types of systems generally provide good thrust and can be thrust-controlled (throttled). In addition, they tend to be the most efficient of high-thrust engines. However, the complexity of these systems is also high. There are stopvalves, pressure regulators, injectors, turbopump machinery and all sorts of plumbing. When considering that there needs to be redundancies on all of these systems in order to make a reliable motor, it easy to see that the overall cost and weight of liquid rockets will be excessive. In addition, due to the liquid nature of the propellants involved, there can also be storage problems. Solid rockets are somewhat different in nature, but also have a specific set of advantages and drawbacks. In solid rocket motors, the fuel and oxidizer are chemically premixed to form a solid fuel grain. By simply igniting this substance, the oxidizer and fuel in the solid react and produce the high-energy combustion gases desired. A variety of designs for the central burning port of the solid fuel can be created so as to produce the desired thrust performance. Solid rockets provide good thrust and are the most simple systems available. On the down side, they also are fairly inefficient fuel burners and cannot be throttled. In some cases there may also be explosion dangers since the oxidizer and fuel are not separated. It appears necessary to obtain some "optimal" solution to this dilemma. On the one hand, we have a high-thrust rocket engine with good performance but high complexity and cost, while on the other hand to get low complexity we must accept lower performance as well. It is at this point where hybrid rockets become an attractive alternative. Hybrid rockets combine elements
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from both types of rockets. In a hybrid rocket, a gaseous or liquid oxidizer is stored in a tank separate from a solid fuel grain. The fuel grain is placed inside a pressure chamber which lies between an oxidizer injector and the exit nozzle. The solid grain is hollowed out in the same fashion to produce a combustion port, very similar to that of a solid rocket motor type system. Unless the fuel is hypergolic (spontaneously combustible in the presence of an oxidizer), the fuel must be initially ignited in order to vaporize some of the fuel into a region just above the solid surface. Then, by injecting the oxidizer at a high mass flow rate and pressure into the pressure chamber / combustion port area, the oxidizer and fuel are free to react in a thin boundary layer just above the surface of the fuel grain. The high energy released and the high temperature attained both increase the energy in the flow and sustain the solid fuel vaporization. The combustion gases pass down the remainder of the combustion port and are expanded via nozzle. By changing the flow rate of the oxidizer, the total production of combustion gases and the energy going into them will be changed in a like fashion (increasing or decreasing). This fact demonstrates that hybrid rockets can be throttled. Given a simple ignition system that would 58(.9590.842-0.9c556417(n)-0.956417( efficiently initiate fuel burning 1.7465(t)-2..956417(n)53658(e)3.18( prior to injecting the aat )250]-2.)-0.956417(i)3658(.956417(.)-0..15789(0.95
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Coasting Flight
Coasting is defined as the free flight of a space vehicle during which the thrust acting on it is zero.
The thrust is zero after the burn out and the rocket coasts. During this flight the rocket ascends to the maximum altitude and decelerates to zero velocity. Therefore, u = up - gtc = 0 The coasting time is given by, tc = up / g The gain in altitude during coasting is given by,
Z c = u ptc
1 2 gt c 2
Thrust vectoring
Thrust vectoring is the ability of an aircraft or rocket or other vehicle to deflect the angle of its thrust away from the vehicles longitudinal axis.
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The advantages of thrust vectoring systems on aircraft include improved post stall performance, the ability (ability to change the body's position, and requires a combination of balance, coordination, speed, strength, endurance etc.) to operate on damaged airfields due to reduced takeoff distances and overall enhanced agility. These factors can provide substantial benefits for military aircraft, which are primarily concerned with manoeuvrability and control. The concept of thrust vectoring is not a new one. The Germans used graphite control vanes in the exhaust stream of their V-2 ballistic missile in World War II for some directional control. Thrust vectoring in aircraft though is a relatively new practice and the concept came under widespread consideration during the cold war. There are several methods employed to produce thrust vectoring. Most current production aircraft with thrust vectoring use turbofan engines with rotating nozzles or turning vanes to deflect the exhaust stream. This method can deflect thrust to as much as 90 degrees providing a vertical take off and landing capability. However for vertical thrust the engine has to be more powerful to overcome the weight of the aircraft, this means the aircraft requires a bigger heavier engine. As a result of the increased overall weight of the aircraft the manoeuvrability and agility are reduced in normal horizontal flight. Another method to produce thrust vectoring is through fluidic thrust vector control. This is achieved using a static nozzle and a secondary flow between the primary jet and the nozzle. This method is desirable for its lower weight, mechanical simplicity and lower radar cross section. Advantages and Disadvantages of Thrust Vector Control
Thrust-vectoring research to date has successfully identified and demonstrated many potential benefits to high-performance aircraft. These include enhanced aircraft manoeuvrability, performance, survivability, and stealth. The full extent of these benefits, however, has yet to be realized even with new generation aircraft because current mechanical thrust-vectoring configurations are heavy, complex, and expensive. Countercurrent shear layer enhancement for fluidic thrust vector control
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Photo courtesy Pratt & Whitney, A United Technologies Company F119 engine for F/A-22 Raptor showing the 2 extreme vectoring cases Thrust Vector Control or Thrust Vectoring is a technology that deflects the mean flow of an engine jet from the centerline in order to transfer some force to the aimed axis. By that imbalance, a momentum is created and used to control the change of attitude of the aircraft. Among other things, thrust vectoring greatly improves maneuverability, even at high angles of attack or low speeds where conventional aerodynamic control surfaces lose all effectiveness. Thrust Vector Control is currently achieved by complex arrays of mechanical actuators capable of modifying the geometry of the nozzle and thus defect the flow. This variable geometry greatly increases weight and maintenance to the engine, and therefore limits the benefits from vectoring the thrust. Fluidic Thrust Vector Control is a technology aiming at the above listed benefits by the use of fluidic means, implying less complexity and faster dynamic responses. Different concepts have been developed in the last decade to redirect the thrust without mechanical actuators. Induction to flow separation, countercurrent shear layer, synthetic pulses or skewing of the sonic line are some of the proven concepts.
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Countercurrent shear flow control has been established as an effective method for fluidic thrust vector control. However, hardware integration issues exist and must be overcome in order to make a viable technology for future aircraft. Recent developments in fluidic thrust vector control have focused on nozzle interior methods that skew the throat of the nozzle using multiple transverse jets.
Rockets The thrust vector control history first came from rocket. The evolution of the rocket has made it an indispensable tool in the exploration of space. For centuries, rockets have provided ceremonial and warfare uses starting with the ancient Chinese, the first to create rockets. But for centuries rockets were in the main rather small, and their use was confined principally to weaponry, the projection of lifelines in sea rescue, signalling, and fireworks displays. Not until the 20th century did a clear understanding of the principles of rockets emerge, and only then did the technology of large rockets begin to evolve. Thus, as far as spaceflight and space science are concerned, the story of rockets up to the beginning of the 20th century was largely prologue.
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Early in the 20th century, an American scientist, Robert H. Goddard (1882-1945), he began to try various types of solid fuels and to measure the exhaust velocities of the burning gases. Since the earliest days of discovery and experimentation, rockets have evolved from simple gunpowder devices into giant vehicles capable of travelling into outer space. Rockets have opened the universe to direct exploration by humankind. A third great space pioneer, Hermann Oberth (1894-1989) of Germany, published a book in 1923 about travel into outer space has led to the development of the V-2 rocket. The V-2 rocket (in Germany called the A-4) was small by comparison to today's designs. It achieved its great thrust by burning a mixture of liquid oxygen and alcohol at a rate of about one ton every seven seconds. Once launched, the V-2 was a formidable weapon that could devastate whole city blocks. Other than that, the V-2 rocket use graphite vanes in the exhaust to achieve the thrust vector control.
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The concept of thrust vectoring is not a new one. The Germans used graphite control vanes in the exhaust stream of their V-2 ballistic missile in World War II for some directional control. Thrust vectoring in aircraft though is a relatively new practice and the concept came under widespread consideration during the cold war. There are several methods employed to produce thrust vectoring. Most current production aircraft with thrust vectoring use turbofan engines with rotating nozzles or turning vanes to deflect the exhaust stream. This method can deflect thrust to as much as 90 degrees providing a vertical take off and landing capability. However for vertical thrust the engine has to be more powerful to overcome the weight of the aircraft, this means the aircraft requires a bigger heavier engine. As a result of the increased overall weight of the aircraft the manoeuvrability and agility are reduced in normal horizontal flight.
Thrust vector control in rockets All chemical propulsion systems can be provided with one of several types of thrust vector control (TVC) mechanisms. Some of these apply either to solid, hybrid, or to liquid propellant rocket propulsion systems, but most are specific to only one of these propulsion categories. Thrust vector control is effective only while the propulsion system is operating and creating an exhaust jet. For the flight period, when a rocket propulsion system is not firing and therefore its TVC is inoperative, a separate mechanism needs to be provided to the flying vehicle for achieving control over its attitude or flight path.
Hence, there are two types of thrust vector control concept: (1) for an engine or a motor with a single nozzle; and (2) for those that have two or more nozzles.
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TVC Mechanisms
Gimbal or hinge - Liquid rockets Movable nozzle (flexible bearing) Solid rockets Movable nozzle (rotary ball with gas seal) Solid rocket Jet vanes - Liqid/Solid Jet tabs - Solid Jetavator - Solid Liquid-side injection - Solid/Liquid Hot gas side injection Solid/Liquid Hinged auxiliary thrust chambers for high thrust engine Liquid Turbine exhaust gas swivel for large engine - Liquid
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cold gas A non combusting form, used for thruster attitude jets Hot water is stored in a tank at hot water high temperature/pressure and rocket turns to steam in exhaust
Chemically powered
Disadvantages Once lit, extinguishing it is difficult although often possible, cannot be throttled in real time; handling issues from Simple, often no moving ignitable mixture, lower Ignitable, self parts, reasonably good performance than liquid sustaining solid mass fraction, reasonable rockets, if grain cracks it Solid rocket fuel/oxidiser mixture I . A thrust schedule can can block nozzle with ("grain") with central sp be designed into the disastrous results, cracks hole and nozzle grain. burn and widen during burn. Refuelling grain harder than simply filling tanks, Lower specific Impulse than Liquid Rockets. Some oxidisers are Quite simple, solid fuel monopropellants, can Separate oxidiser/fuel, is essentially inert explode in own right; typically oxidiser is without oxidiser, safer; mechanical failure of solid Hybrid rocket liquid and kept in a cracks do not escalate, propellant can block tank, the other solid throttleable and easy to nozzle, central hole widens with central hole switch off. over burn and negatively affects mixture ratio. Simple in concept, catalysts can be easily Monopropellant Propellant such as Hydrazine, Hydrogen throttleable, low contaminated, rocket Type Description Advantages
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Peroxide or Nitrous Oxide, flows over catalyst and exothermically decomposes and hot gases are emitted through nozzle
monopropellants can detonate if contaminated or provoked, Isp is perhaps 1/3 of best liquids
Tripropellant rocket
Up to ~99% efficient Pumps needed for high Two fluid (typically combustion with performance are expensive liquid) propellants are excellent mixture to design, huge thermal introduced through control, throttleable, can fluxes across combustion injectors into be used with turbopumps chamber wall can impact combustion chamber which permits incredibly reuse, failure modes and burnt lightweight tanks, can be include major explosions, a safe with extreme care lot of plumbing is needed. Rocket takes off as a bipropellant rocket, Simplicity and ease of Lower performance than then turns to using just control bipropellants one propellant as a monopropellant Three different propellants (usually hydrogen, hydrocarbon and liquid oxygen) are introduced into a combustion chamber in variable mi.53536(n)-0.95641lu5789(r)2.417( )-0.478208(l)-2.56417(w)-9.3165.48 422417
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added to the airstream to increase maximum altitude Easily tested on ground. High thrust/weight ratios Intake air is chilled to are possible (~14) very low temperatures together with good fuel Precooled jet at inlet before passing efficiency over a wide range of airspeeds, mach engine / LACE through a ramjet or (combined cycle turbojet engine. Can be 0-5.5+; this combination of efficiencies may with rocket) combined with a rocket engine for permit launching to orbital insertion. orbit, single stage, or very rapid intercontinental travel.
Exists only at the lab prototyping stage. Examples include RB545, SABRE, ATREX
Electrically powered
Type Resistojet rocket (electric heating) Description A monopropellant is electrically heated by a filament for extra performance Similar to resistojet in concept but with inert propellant, except an arc is used which allows higher temperatures Advantages Disadvantages Higher Isp than monopropellant Uses a lot of power and hence alone, about 40% gives typically low thrust higher. Very low thrust and high power, performance is similar to Ion drive.
Pulsed plasma Plasma is used to thruster (electric erode a solid arc heating; emits propellant plasma)
High Isp , can be pulsed on and off Low energetic efficiency for attitude control
similar thrust/weight ratio with ion drives (worse), thermal issues, as with ion drives very Variable specific Microwave heated Variable Isp from high power requirements for impulse plasma with magnetic 1000 seconds to significant thrust, really needs magnetoplasma throat/nozzle 10,000 seconds advanced nuclear reactors, never rocket flown, requires low temperatures for superconductors to work
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Solar powered
The Solar thermal rocket would make use of solar power to directly heat reaction mass, and therefore does not require an electrical generator as most other forms of solar-powered propulsion do. A solar thermal rocket only has to carry the means of capturing solar energy, such as concentrators and mirrors. The heated propellant is fed through a conventional rocket nozzle to produce thrust. The engine thrust is directly related to the surface area of the solar collector and to the local intensity of the solar radiation. Advantages Simple design. Using hydrogen propellant, 900 seconds of Isp is comparable to Nuclear Thermal rocket, Solar Propellant is without the problems and complexity thermal heated by of controlling a fission reaction. Using rocket solar collector highermolecular-weight propellants, for example water water, lowers performance. Type Description Disadvantages Only useful once in space, as thrust is fairly low, but hydrogen is not easily stored in space, otherwise moderate/low Isp if higher molecular-mass propellants are used
Beam powered
Disadvantages ~1 MW of power per kg of payload is needed to achieve orbit, relatively high Propellant is heated accelerations, lasers are blocked by by light beam (often simple in clouds, fog, reflected laser light may be principle, in light beam laser) aimed at dangerous, pretty much needs hydrogen principle very high powered vehicle from a monopropellant for good performance distance, either exhaust speeds can rocket which needs heavy tankage, some directly or indirectly be achieved designs are limited to ~600 seconds due via heat exchanger to reemission of light since propellant/heat exchanger gets white hot ~1 MW of power per kg of payload is needed to achieve orbit, relatively high accelerations, microwaves are absorbed microwaves avoid to a degree by rain, reflected microwave Propellant is heated reemission of microwaves may be dangerous, pretty by microwave beam energy, so ~900 beam much needs hydrogen monopropellant seconds exhaust powered aimed at vehicle for good performance which needs from a distance speeds might be rocket heavy tankage, transmitter diameter is achieveable measured in kilometres to achieve a fine enough beam to hit a vehicle at up to 100 km. Type Description Advantages
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Nuclear powered
Nuclear propulsion includes a wide variety of propulsion methods that use some form of nuclear reaction as their primary power source. Various types of nuclear propulsion have been proposed, and some of them tested, for spacecraft applications: Type Radioisotope rocket/"Poodle thruster" (radioactive decay energy) Description Advantages Disadvantages
Heat from about 700-800 radioactive decay seconds, almost no is used to heat moving parts hydrogen
Maximum temperature is limited propellant (typ. by materials technology, some Isp can be high, hydrogen) is radioactive particles can be perhaps 900 seconds Nuclear thermal passed through a present in exhaust in some or more, above unity rocket (nuclear nuclear reactor to designs, nuclear reactor shielding thrust/weight ratio fission energy) heat to high is heavy, unlikely to be permitted with some designs temperature from surface of the Earth, thrust/weight ratio is not high. Nsion Nuclear reaction Very hot propellant, difficulties in heating propellant using a gaseous not limited by without losing fissionables in Gas core reactor state fission keeping reactor solid, exhaust, exhaust inherently rocket (nuclear nuclearVfission energy) reactor in intimate Isp between 1500 and highly radioactive, massive fission energy) contact with thermal issues particularly for 3000 seconds but propellant with very high thrust nozzle/throat 9809 0 0 1 376.32 458863(r)-7.6513
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below Earth's magnetosphere. Containment of antimatter, Antimatter Nuclear pulse production of antimatter in catalyzed nuclear propulsion with Smaller sized vehicle macroscopic quantities isn't pulse propulsion antimatter assist might be possible currently feasible. Theoretical (fission and/or for smaller bombs only at this point. fusion energy) Fusion rocket Fusion is used to Very high exhaust Largely beyond current state of (nuclear fusion heat propellant velocity the art. energy) Problems with antimatter Extremely energetic, production and handling; energy Antimatter rocket Antimatter annihilation heats very high theoretical losses in neutrinos, gamma rays, (annihilation propellant exhaust velocity muons; thermal issues. energy) Theoretical only at this point
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Disadvantages
Explosion and fire potential is larger; failure can be catastrophic Many require environmental permit and safety features for transport on public conveyances Under certain conditions propellants can detonate some solid
Cumulative grain damage occurs through temperature cycling or rough handling; this limits useful life If designed for reuse, it requires extensive factory rework and new propellants
Usually, higher overall density; this allows a Requires an ignition system more compact package, a small vehicle (less drag) Can provide TVC, but at increased complexity Once ignited, cannot change predetermined thrust or duration
Some propellants have nontoxic, clean exhaust Integrity of grain (cracks, unbounded areas) is gases, but at a performance penalty difficult to determine in the field Some grain and case design can be used with Large boosters take a few seconds to start several nozzles Thrust termination devices permit control over Cannot be tested prior to use total impulse Can be designed for recovery and reuse Thermal insulation is required in almost all rocket motors
Some tactical missile motors have been Needs a safety provision to prevent inadvertent produced in large quantities ignition, which would lead to an unplanned motor firing. Can cause a disaster.
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Disadvantages
Relatively complex design, more components, more things to go wrong! parts or
Cryogenic propellants cannot be stored for long periods except when tanks are well insulated and escaping vapours are recondensed. Propellant loading occurs at the launch stand and requires cryogenic propellant storage facilities Spills or leaks of several propellants can be hazardous, corrosive, toxic, and cause fires, but this can be minimized with gelled propellants More overall weight for most short-duration, lowtotal-impulse applications.
Thrust-time profile can be randomly controlled; this allows a reproducible flight trajectory
Cutoff impulse can be controllable with thrust termination device (better control of vehicle terminal velocity) Can be tested at full thrust on ground or launch pad prior to flight Can be designed for reuse after field services and checkout
Non-hypergolic propellants require an ignition system Tanks need to be pressurized by a separate pressurization system. This can require high pressure inert gas storage for long periods of time. Bullet impact will cause leaks, sometimes a fire, but usually no detonations; gelled propellants can minimize or eliminate these hazards. Usually requires more volume due to lower average propellant density and relatively inefficient packaging of engine components Sloshing in tank can cause a flight stability problem, but can be minimized with baffles. Smoky exhaust (soot) plume can occur with some hydrocarbon fuels
Thrust chamber (or some part of the vehicle) can be cooled and made lightweight
Storable liquid propellants have been kept in vehicle for more than 20 years and engine can be ready to operate quickly. Most propellants have nontoxic exhaust, which is environmentally acceptable Can modify operating conditions during firing to prevent some failures that would otherwise result in the loss of the mission or vehicle Can provide component redundancy (e.g., dual check valves or extra thrust chamber) to enhance reliability Plume radiation and smoke are usually low
Needs special design provisions for start in zero gravity High-thrust unit requires several seconds to start
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* All rocket vehicles work on the principle of reaction, or "recoil", which is a consequence of the law of conservation of momentum. If a cannon fires a cannonball, the cannonball flies away with a momentum equal to the mass of the cannonball times its velocity. The shot gives the cannon the same momentum in the opposite direction, and if it were free to move without interference from friction or other constraint, it would fly backward, with a velocity less than that of the cannonball by the same factor that the cannon's mas f5.347(3597(h)-0.957028(e)3.15789( )-90.6536( )-0.478208
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mass of the exhaust flow and the greater the velocity of that flow, the greater the recoil generated by the rocket engine, and the greater the thrust. There are various ways to generate this thrust, though in all cases the result is the same, to expel a gas at high velocity. Nuclear rocket engines run a fluid through a nuclear reactor. Electric rocket engines typically accelerate ions to high velocities using electrified grids. Chemical rocket engines, the subject of this chapter, burn a "fuel" and an "oxidizer", either in a solid mixture or stored as liquids in separate tanks, and blast the exhaust out a usually bell-shaped ("convergentdivergent" or "con-di") nozzle. Rocket engine thrust is formally measured in newtons (N) in the metric system; in pounds force (lbf) in the English system; and sometimes in kilograms force (kgp, where the "p" stands for the French "puissance / force"). Since the kilogram is a measure of mass, not force, kgp is a little dubious from the strict physics point of view, but it is equivalent to newtons divided by 9.81, and at least at one time was a fairly common measure of thrust. Efficiency of a rocket engine can be measured in terms of exhaust velocity, but since the actual thrust is also dependent on the mass of the exhaust gas, a more useful measure is "specific impulse (Isp)", or thrust produced by a unit mass of propellant per second. In metric units, Isp is defined as "newtons per kilogram of propellant per second", and in English units it is defined as "pounds thrust per pound of propellant per second". The second definition, by the way, evaluates to "seconds", and that's normally how specific impulse is described. Specific impulse can be thought of as an index of the "mass ratio" of a rocket vehicle, or the ratio of payload to vehicle mass: the higher the specific impulse, the greater the efficiency in terms of the amount of payload per fuel mass. However, this is a somewhat narrow definition of "efficiency", a much more practical one being how much payload can be lifted at a given cost, and in such terms an engine with the highest specific impulse may not be the most efficient. In addition, high specific impulse does not necessarily mean high thrust, and in fact as later chapters will show, highly efficient engines with high values of specific impulse tend to have very low thrust. * A rocket vehicle obviously consists of some sort of airframe or casing mounting a rocket engine and providing storage for propellants. Less obviously, it must also carry guidance and control systems. Holiday firework rockets simply have a stick or fins to keep them flying straight. Unguided rocket projectiles used by combat aircraft to attack ground targets or launched as a form of "barrage" artillery also generally use fins, though they also may have multiple rocket exhausts canted at an angle around the centerline of the rocket to cause them to spin for stabilization. For large rocket vehicles, such as long-range missiles or space launch boosters, which are the focus of this discussion, more sophisticated control schemes are required. While some large rocket vehicles do have fins, fins are only useful at low altitudes, since they are ineffective once the vehicle leaves the atmosphere. There are several approaches for control of such large vehicles:
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The early "V-2" missile, built by the Germans in World War II to attack England, used moveable graphite vanes in the rocket engine exhaust. This caused some loss of thrust, and so this approach was later abandoned. The V-2 used a gyroscopic control system to move the vanes. The control system included three gyros, one each for the two horizontal and one vertical directions, and responded to changes in the rocket's attitude and movement by changing the direction of the vanes. Modern rocket vehicles have retained gyroscopic control systems, though they will most likely now be implemented with solidstate "ring laser gyros" instead of rotating gyroscopes. A more modern flight control scheme is to use a "gimballed" rocket engine, in which the rocket nozzle can be moved back and forth or side to side to change the vehicle's direction of flight. Another modern scheme is to use "verniers", or small auxiliary rocket engines that produce thrust off to the sides of the vehicle to change flight direction.
Most modern large rocket vehicles are actually assemblages of separate rocket vehicles, known as "stages", that are stacked on top of each other. A big rocket vehicle contains a large amount of fuel, and as the fuel is burned up, the vehicle carries more and more useless dead weight. With "staging", when one stage is exhausted, the next ignites and the first is discarded. Staging is a tricky operation, in essence trying to launch one rocket vehicle on top of another while the whole assembly is in flight, and some early long-range missiles used dodges to simplify the scheme. The original American Atlas missile, for example, used "half staging", with a three-engine assembly in a skirt at the bottom; two of the engines were discarded along with the skirt after initial boost. The Soviet R-7 missile / SL-1 booster used "clustering", with four auxiliary boosters clustered around a similar central "core" booster, the auxiliary boosters being discarded after initial boost. Both these schemes allowed all the engines to be ignited at take-off, simplifying launch procedures. They were perfectly practical rocket vehicles, and in fact their descendants are still in use. More modern large rocket vehicles use true staging, though they often also use a set of auxiliary solid-fuel or liquid-fuel "strap-on" boosters attached to the first stage to provide additional thrust. Each stage is connected to the others by a "shroud", or the case of many Soviet-Russian missiles and boosters, by an open framework. The open framework has the advantage that the upper stage can be ignited before the lower stage is discarded, which simplifies the staging process. The Soviets also came up with an ingenious staging scheme for their R-27 / SS-N-6 submarinelaunched ballistic missile to produce a more compact vehicle, with the engines for the payload stage actually contained in the fuel tank for the main stage. Pyrotechnics were used to cut open the tank so the rocket engine could ignite. * While the lower stages of a multistage rocket vehicle are discarded before the machine leaves the atmosphere, the upper stages and the spacecraft they carry, if there is a distinction, need to operate in space. Such "space vehicles" generally need "restartable" rocket engines that can be turned on or off, which is a somewhat tricky problem because under "zero-gee" conditions the propellants do not tend to flow to the bottom of the tanks.
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fed engines fueled by LOX and propane. LOX tends to be self-pressurizing as it boils off, and propane becomes self-pressurizing if heated slightly. Most modern rocket engines use high-speed turbine pumps to drive the propellants into the combustion chamber at a very fast rate. The turbopumps are turned on with a "starter", an electrically activated solid-fuel charge that spins up the drive turbine for the turbopumps. However, even rocket vehicles that use turbopumps still pressurize the propellant tanks, not so much to drive propellant flow rate as to prevent a void from arising as the tank is vacated, which would otherwise stifle thrust or even cause the propellant tanks to collapse. The fuel line is generally wrapped around the engine nozzle, helping to cool the engine and also "preheat" the fuel, conserving some of the combustion energy that would otherwise be wasted. This is known as "regenerative" cooling. While regenerative cooling is common now, early rockets used water cooling, or various types of "heat sinks" -- sets of fins or other structures that could radiate the heat away. There is also usually a second set of valves downstream from the turbopumps. These are kept closed until propellant pressures build up enough to ensure a regular fuel flow into the combustion chamber. If the propellants were allowed to trickle unevenly into the combustion chamber, the burn would be irregular and poorly controlled. For similar reasons, the propellant feed system is usually designed to make sure that oxidizer flow reaches its proper flow level before fuel does. However, modern liquid fuel rocket engines are often designed to burn "fuel rich", throwing so much fuel into the combustion chamber that all of it can't be burned. This may seem inefficient, but it allows an increase in exhaust mass flow, and so thrust, without raising exhaust temperature. Determining the proper propellant ratio is a fine art. The propellants are forced into the combustion chamber using an "injector" system that ensures they mix properly, which can be visualized as something like a shower spray head. The engine burn is then initiated with an "igniter" system. Igniter systems can be based on electrical spark plugs, pyrotechnic charges, electroresistive heating elements, and even small igniter rockets using hypergolic storable propellants. The exhaust then pours out the engine nozzle, producing thrust. The input to the nozzle is a narrow constriction, where the exhaust flows at high pressure and low velocity. As the exhaust flows down the nozzle it expands, losing pressure but gaining velocity, resulting in greater momentum transfer to the rocket vehicle. There is a tradeoff between nozzle size and thrust. If the nozzle is too small, the exhaust will be robbed of thrust. If the nozzle is too big, the exhaust will separate from the nozzle wall, not only making the larger size useless but also counterproductive, since it sets up turbulence that robs the exhaust of thrust. The behavior of the exhaust varies with atmospheric pressure, which of course falls off as the rocket climbs, and so optimizing the exhaust design is a troublesome matter. It is also obvious that building a big engine is more difficult and expensive than a small one. As a
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compromise, rocket engines were developed that featured multiple clustered "thrust chambers" but shared the same systems upstream. * Usually the interval between start of the starter motor and engine ignition is about a second. Once the propellant is gated into the main combustion chamber, a small amount of it is fed back towards the turbopump drive turbine and burned in a small secondary combustion chamber to take over from the starter, which then burns out. The propellant feed to the secondary combustion chamber must be precisely regulated to ensure proper turbopump RPM. Liquid fuel rocket engines that have variable thrust have adjustable valves on these feed lines, while those that have constant thrust simply use a small orifice to limit fuel rate. Incidentally, the secondary combustion chamber may need an igniter of its own, though in many cases the starter exhaust into the drive turbine will be hot enough to ignite the liquid propellants. To get really elaborate, exhaust from the secondary combustion chamber has several other uses. First, it is used to drive a lubrication system that keeps the turbopump system oiled and running smoothly. Since the oil in the lubrication system tends to get hot after a while, it is cooled using a heat exchanger linked to a loop off the fuel line. The intake of this loop is downstream from the turbopump, while the output is upstream, to ensure a strong pressure difference and a fast fuel rate through the heat exchanger to carry off heat without vaporizing the fuel. Second, the exhaust is fed back to the fuel tank to keep it pressurized. The secondary combustion chamber burns fuel-rich, which ensures that little or no oxidizer is present in the exhaust that could cause fuel to combust in the tank, particularly if hypergolic fuels are used. The exhaust should not be too hot, not because it could ignite the fuel, but because it could vaporize it and disrupt fuel flow, and so another heat exchanger linked to a loop in the fuel line is used to draw off the heat.
Pressure is maintained in the oxidizer tank through a separate system thtel13658( )-130.728(i)-2temue13658(
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flow to the main combustion chamber shut off propellant flow, and the engine burn halts immediately. Of course, a controlled shutdown is absolutely essential in a restartable engine. As mentioned, ensuring fuel flow in a restartable engine is tricky because the propellants cannot flow down to the engine, since "down" doesn't exist under weightless conditions. There are several approaches:
The most conceptually obvious scheme is to fit bladders in the propellant tanks that are filled by compressed gas to force the fluids out. A somewhat less obvious scheme is to fit a set of screens into the tank, with the mesh becoming finer as they near the bottom of the tank. Surface tension of the fuel on the mesh causes the propellant to "wick" towards the bottom of the tank. A third, even trickier but common, approach is to use a thruster to give the rocket vehicle a small, short acceleration to cause fuel to flow into the main engine. Ignition of the main engine sustains the flow, and the thruster is reloaded with propellant during the main engine burn to prepare it for another restart.
* Modern LOX-hydrocarbon rocket engines burn LOX and kerosene, or more precisely a highly refined grade of kerosene named "RP-1" or just "RP" for short, which some sources claim stands for "rocket propellant" and others claim stands for "refined petroleum" -- take your pick. RP looks and smells like ordinary kerosene, but it is pure and has highly predictable burn and density characteristics. If a large rocket vehicle were fueled with normal kerosene it might burn, but not evenly, and the fuel weight could vary by a matter of tonnes, which would make the performance of the vehicle very unpredictable. LOX-RP is traditionally one of the most popular liquid-fuel schemes. LOX-RP engines typically have a specific impulse of about 260 seconds. This will be used as a "baseline" value in the rest of this document, with specific impulse values given relative to it. This avoids the question of metric or English units and the less-than-intuitive use of "seconds" as a unit of measure for rocket efficiency. LOX-LH2 provides higher specific impulse, about 1.5 times that of LOX-RP, but there is price for it. LH2 is a low-density fuel, meaning it requires a large tank, and the rocket vehicle has to be big as well. It also has to be kept very cold, substantially colder than liquid oxygen. The LOX and LH2 tanks have to be thermally isolated from each other, or the LOX will tend to freeze and the LH2 to boil. LOX-kerosene and LOX-LH2 are both "cryogenic" propulsion systems, meaning they require cooled propellants. Both use cooled LOX oxidizer, while LOX-LH2 also requires even colder LH2 fuel. Incidentally, some sources refer only to LOX-LH2 as "cryogenic" propulsion, but this usage seems a bit misleading and will not be used in this document. A rocket vehicle using cryogenic propellants has to be fueled a relatively short time before launch, or the propellants will gradually vaporize away. Launch systems for such vehicles cycle the cryogenic propellants through an external cooling system to keep losses as low as possible, and also include a bleed valve to keep vaporized propellants from building up in the tanks and possibly rupturing them.
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Storable propellants, as the name implies, avoid this problem. They can be loaded into a rocket vehicle and left indefinitely. One of the earliest storable propellant combinations was concentrated hydrogen peroxide (HO), known as "high-test peroxide (HTP)", for oxidizer, and aniline (C6H7N1), a benzene derivative, for fuel. Since HTP tends to degrade slowly in storage over time, it was generally replaced as an oxidizer by nitric acid (NHO3), nitrogen tetroxide (N2O4), or combinations of the two. Aniline was replaced by hydrazine (NH2NH2); unsymmetrical dimethyl hydrazine (UDMH), with the chemical formula N(CH3)2NH2; or a mix of the two, sometimes called "Aerozine-50". Nitrogen tetroxide and UDMH are a popular combination, and have a specific impulse only a few percent less than that of LOX-RP. Storables have a number of drawbacks. Not only are they usually hypergolic, they are also as a rule extremely toxic and corrosive. Storable propellant tanks have to be lined with stainless steel, and workers handling these propellants must wear protective clothing and respirators. There were cases in both the Soviet and American space programs where space capsules returning to Earth fired thrusters fueled by storables too persistently, and the fumes overcame the crews, though nobody was ever done any long-term harm. The US space shuttle's orbital propulsion system uses storables, and when the orbiter lands, a crew in protective clothing has to go out and "safe" it before anyone else is allowed to get near. The nasty behavior of storables means higher cost, and they are also now generally regarded as environmentally unacceptable and avoided when possible. Storables were initially used in military missiles that had to be ready to fire on a moment's notice. Their tanks were permanently fueled, capped by seals that were blown at the moment of firing. Solid propellants are now preferred for military missiles, though the Soviets stayed with storables for much longer than the US since they were comfortable with the technology. The Soviets even used them for submarine-launched missiles, despite the threat posed by such toxic and violent chemicals in a closed environment. The successor Russian government has found disposal of large quantities of toxic fuels to be a major environmental headache. * Storables are still used on spacecraft, such as deep-space probes that will fly through space for years and make occasional engine burns. Obviously there is no practical way to store cryogenic propellants for such a long period of time. Of course, the thruster systems on such spacecraft are also based on storable fuels. Thruster systems are in general simple, very low thrust, restartable rockets. The most elaborate use storable propellants, typically N2O4-UDMH, but "monopropellant" thrusters are also used. These feature a fuel, usually hydrazine, that burns when passed over a catalyst. Monopropellant thrusters are much simpler and, in principle, more reliable than a bipropellant system, but they are much less efficient, with a monopropellant hydrazine thruster having a specific impulse less than 70% that of LOX-RP. Whether bipropellant or monopropellant, the thrusters are fed using a pressure or electric pump system, as the high propellant flow rates of a turbopump are not required.
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Another scheme occasionally used is the "cold gas" thruster, which is nothing more than a compressed-gas jet. Cold gas thrusters are not efficient at all, but they are extremely simple and very safe since no combustibles or combustion is involved. There are a range of more exotic thruster schemes, which are discussed in a later chapter.
* A wide range of different liquid propellant combinations have been used for liquid rocket engines, and the combinations listed above are only those that actually went into widespread use. Unusual fuels include ammonia and ethanol (grain alco986(t)-2.53658(h)-0.9564.53658(i)-2.5-2.53658(s)-0.4
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The Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) and booster was powered by three engines based on the Navaho engine. The half-stage featured two "LR-89" series engines -- which confusingly shared a turbopump and so could just as well be regarded as a single engine with two thrust chambers -- and an "LR-105" series engine. The entire engine assembly went through a series of designations, from the "MA-1" of flight test prototypes to the "MA-5" that was used in maturity. Liftoff thrust of the full MA-5 engine assembly was about 1,920 kN (195,500 kgp / 431,000 lbf), with the thrust falling to about a third of that when the half-stage was discarded. The Atlas would never be very useful as a weapon, but it would prove a wildly successful space launch vehicle. The "Thor" medium-range missile, which would evolve into the "Delta" series of launch vehicles, was powered by a single "LR-79" or "MB-3" engine, also with 756 kN (77,000 kgp / 170,000 lbf) thrust and based on the Navaho engine. The initial version of the "Titan" missile was powered by a different type of engine, the Aerojet "LR-87-3", which was a single engine with twin thrust chambers, providing a total of about 1,470 kN (150,000 kgp / 330,000 lbf) thrust, burning LOX and kerosene. The Titan upper stage was powered by an Aerojet "LR-91-3" engine, similar to the LR-87-3 but with a single thrust chamber and providing 356 kN (36,300 kgp / 80,000 lbf) thrust. Later versions of the Titan used modified versions of the LR-87 and LR-91 that burned storable propellants.
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In the late 1950s, the US wanted to go to still more powerful LOX-RP engines. This led to the development of the Rocketdyne "H-1" engine, with eight used on the first stage of the early "Saturn I" and "Saturn IB" boosters, providing 837 kN (85,300 kgp / 90,000 lbf) thrust each. A improved version of the H-1 designated the "RS-27" was used for later variants of the Delta launch vehicle. The H-1 also was the basis for the scaled-up Rocketdyne "F-1" engine, with 6,671 kN (680,000 kgp / 1.5 million lbf) thrust. Five such engines powered the first stage of the "Saturn V" booster that sent Americans to the Moon. In the meantime, the US had been pioneering LOX-LH2 propulsion, first developing the Pratt & Whitney "RL10" engines with 66.7 kN (6,800 kgp / 15,000 lbf) thrust each, with two powering the "Centaur" upper stage of the "Atlas Centaur" booster. The Centaur upper stage still retains this engine in the 21st century, in the form of the "RL10A-4" variant, and it is also used on the upper stages of the Boeing "Delta III" and "Delta IV" boosters, in the form of the more advanced "RL10B-2" engine. A throttleable version, the "RL10A-5", was used on the McDonnell Douglas DC-X/A demonstrator spacecraft in the 1990s.
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Pratt & Whitney is now working on the "RL60" LOX-LH2 engine, which has a similar form factor to the RL10 series but is much more powerful, with a thrust in the 267 kN (27,200 kgp / 60,000 lbf) range.
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The next step from the RL10 was the much more powerful "J-2" LOX-LH2 engine, providing 105.95 kN (108,000 kgp / 238,000 lbf) thrust. NASA is now planning a simplified and uprated version of the J-2, the "J-2S", with 1,179 kN (120,200 kgp / 265,000 lbf) thrust, for the new manned Moon effort. The J-2 led to the Rocketdyne "Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME)", which as its name states is the primary powerplant of the NASA space shuttle. The shuttle uses three SSMEs, with 2,090 kN (213,000 kgp / 470,000 lbf) thrust each. The SSME's development was notoriously troublesome, since it was pushing the state of the art and the program was underfunded. It has since become a reliable and effective engine, and a simplified non-reusable version may be used on the new manned Moon effort.
The latest American-designed engine is the Rocketdyne "RS-68" engine, used on the Delta 4 series of boosters. The RS-68 is currently the world's biggest LOX-LH2 engine, with a height of 5.18 meters (17 feet), a nozzle diameter of 2.44 meters (8 feet), and a launch thrust of 2,918 kN (297,500 kgp / 656,000 lbf). The RS-68 is an entire),(s)-1.7465(9-1.7465(9-1.7465(9-0.5356(o(9-1.746.1578
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The Soviets followed the SL-1 series of boosters with the much more powerful "Proton" booster, which put the "Salyut" and "Mir" space stations into orbit. The first stage of the Proton is powered by six "RD-253" engines using N2O4 / UDMH storable propellants and providing 3,090 kN (315,000 kgp / 695,000 lbf) thrust each. Later, the Soviets developed a much more powerful LOX-RP four-chamber engine, the "RD170", with 8,182 kN (834,000 kgp / 1.84 million lbf) thrust. The first stage of the "Zenit" launch vehicle is powered by a single RD-170 engine. The Soviets also developed a variant of the RD170 designated the "RD-180" with two thrust chambers instead of four and, unsurprisingly, half the thrust. In an interesting irony, the RD-180 is regarded as being competitive at the very least with American rocket engine technology, development of which stagnated for a few decades. The RD-180 has been adopted for the latest variants of the Atlas booster, the "Atlas III" and the "Atlas V". Both these launch vehicles have abandoned the old half-stage scheme and now use a single RD-180 engine. The RD-180 engines are provided for these boosters by a collaboration of NPO Energomash of Russia and Pratt & Whitney in the US. * As far as storable propellant engines used on spacecraft themselves go, one of the classic examples was the "Service Propulsion System (SPS)" for the Apollo Command & Service Module (CSM). The SPS generated 91.2 kN (9,300 kg / 20,500 lb) of thrust. It was a fully restartable pressure-fed engine, with no turbopumps, featuring redundant subsystems where possible; its design philosophy was to make it as simple and reliable as possible. Of course, the Apollo Lunar Module (LM) also used storable propellant engines, with the descent stage engine providing 44.5 kN (4,535 kg / 10,000 lb) thrust and the ascent stage engine providing 15.6 kN (1,590 kg / 3,500 lb) thrust. As mentioned, the space shuttle orbiter has a secondary set of storable propellant engines, known as the "Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS)", for maneuvers after arrival in space. Each of the two OMS engines on the orbiter provide 27 kN (2,750 kg / 6,070 lb) of thrust. * While conventional chemical rocket engines continue to be refined, work has also been performed on new configurations, such as the "linear aerospike" and "rocket-based combined cycle" engines. NASA was working with private industry on an aerospike engine for the cancelled X-33 experimental reusable launch vehicle. An aerospike engine is very different in appearance from a conventional rocket engine. Instead of a bell-shaped nozzle, the aerospike looks like a wedge rammed into the rear of a vehicle, with nozzle ports, or "thrust cell chambers", along each side of the base of the wedge. Thrust cell chamber exhaust is confined on one side by the wedge, with air pressure providing confinement on the other side. Propellant pumps and other hardware are contained inside the wedge. Other rocket companies have continued to experiment with the aerospike concept, launching small rockets that feature a spike surrounded by exhaust holes. As with the cancelled X-33 engine, confinement is provided by the spike on the inside and air pressure on the outside. The
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advantage of the aerospike nozzle is that it automatically adjusts for air pressure, while a conventional bell nozzle is designed basically around one value of air pressure. Aerospike advocates believe they can achieve efficiencies a quarter to a third better than those of a conventional rocket nozzle. The RBCC engine, as its name more or less hints, is a combination of jet engine and rocket engine. An RBCC engine consists of a "supersonic combustion ramjet (scramjet)" -- basically just a "stovepipe" with an air intake in front, fuel injectors and igniters in the middle, and an exhaust at the back -- but with non-airbreathing rocket nozzles placed inside, within the flow path. Early RBCC engines will use LOX-hydrocarbon propulsion, but LOX-LH2 propulsion is expected over the long run.
An RBCC-powered spacecraft would take off using rocket propulsion, with the airflow through the ramjet duct helping boost thrust through simple momentum transfer. At about Mach 2.5, ramjet propulsion would take over, moving to scramjet mode at about Mach 6. At Mach 8 to 12, the spacecraft would be above the atmosphere, and the R(c)-6.8 2 0 Td [(h)-0.953971-10.97553971(e)3.157
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time. Asphault was a poor binder, however, tending to crack at cold ambient temperatures, with the cracks interfering with the burning process; and to flow at high ambient temperatures, requiring the rockets to be stored nose-down. It also produced a great deal of black smoke, which caused particularly difficulties for use as "rocket assisted take-off (RATO)" boosters for aircraft. If one aircraft took off with RATO, the next following it would have to take off through a black haze that blocked the pilot's field of view. After the war the Americans moved on to more sophisticated solid propellants, using synthetic polymers, particularly synthetic rubbers such as butadiene tire rubbers, mixed with ammonium perchlorate (NH4ClO4) oxidizer (which provides higher performance than potassium perchlorate and burns cleaner) and large proportions of powdered aluminum. The powdered aluminum burned at a high temperature, helping improve thrust. Use of high proportions of aluminum had been held up for some time because the conventional wisdom said that proportions greater than 5% wouldn't burn, but this turned out to be superstition when researchers ignorant of this "rule" tried higher proportions and found they got unprecedented levels of thrust. Later on, small proportions of iron oxide were included to provide a high-temperature "thermite reaction" with the aluminum powder. Modern solid fuels provide a specific impulse only a few percentage points below that of LOX-RP. The fact that the propellant mix was based on rubberlike polymers allowed the "grain", or solidrocket fuel element excluding the nozzle), to be cast in large blocks that resisted shrinkage or cracking, which would have affected the continuity of their burn at the very least and caused catastrophic failure at worst.
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Electrical resistance heating wires could be inserted in the bottom of the grain as igniters. Since a safe solid fuel had a high ignition temperature, the wires sometimes ignited a primer element that had a lower ignition temperature, with this primer then igniting the grain. The primer might even have two "stages", with one element with a low ignition temperature igniting one with an intermediate ignition temperature, with the second element then igniting the grain. The central mandrel that defined the hole configuration for the desired flight thrust profile was coated with Teflon polymer to allow it to be removed from the cured grain. In the early days of solid fuel rockets, grease was used instead of Teflon, but the grease contaminated the solid fuel and that approach was abandoned. Modern solid-fuel rocket engines are ideal for military applications. They can be stored almost indefinitely and aren't overly fussy about how they are handled, and they can be used and launched at any time with little preparation. Solid fuels are also denser than liquid fuels, allowing missiles to be more compact, if not that much lighter. This compactness was a particular plus for the development of solid-fuel long-range strategic nuclear missiles, since it allowed them to be stored in a smaller and cheaper missile silo or be carried on a submarine. Considerable effort was invested in the late 1950s to develop processes to manufacture the large grains for the "Minuteman" ICBM and the "Polaris" submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM). These processes were not trivial: the ammonium perchlorate oxidizer had to be very finely and uniformly milled; all the materials in the solid fuel recipe had to very uniformly mixed; and the grains had to be poured and then cured for several days in a vacuum environment to prevent bubbles from forming. Work was also done to synthesize high-performance solid fuels, which included proportions of nitroglycerine and a particulate form of nitrocellulose, and in some cases a high explosive known as HMX as well. These high-performance mixes were unsurprisingly less stable and more troublesome in every respect than conventional mixes, and so they were only used for small final stages that were more easily handled. The work on developing long-range solid-fuel missiles also led to technology for solid-rocket flight control, and for "thrust termination", or shutting down the engine of the upper stage so the warhead could separate and proceed on its proper trajectory to its target. Small solid-fuel missiles can use fins for flight control, but that isn't practical for long-range missiles since they boost out of the atmosphere, making fins so much dead weight. A steerable nozzle can be used as with a liquid fuel engine, but a simpler scheme was adopted for the Minuteman and Polaris, using a pivoting ring around the lip of a fixed nozzle to redirect the thrust. The ring was known as a "jetavator". Later, inert freon gas was selectively injected into the throat of a fixed nozzle to deflect thrust. As far as thrust termination went, the problem was that once a solid rocket motor is lit, it burns to termination and there's no way to shut it off. There is a way to cheat, however, by venting the thrust from the stage to the sides or forward so the warhead could continue on its way by itself.
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These missile projects also led to the use fiberglass for motor casings, reducing the weight of the rocket motor and so increasing payload. Building large "filament wound" casings was troublesome, however, and so most casings were made of metal, usually steel, though lightweight titanium could be used when weight was an issue and cost not too great an issue. The size of solid-fuel grains grew by bounds through the 1950s, and by the early 1960s they were so big that they were becoming too bulky and heavy to handle and transport in any sensible way. To get around this problem of scale, a new technology, "segmentation", was developed in which the grains were fabricated as cylindrical segments, with the segments locked together in a single solid rocket motor using "lock rings". By the mid-1960s, segmented solid-rocket boosters (SRBs) were being manufactured that could provide heavy thrust to help put increasingly large payloads into orbit.
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The first large solid-fuel grain to be developed was the Thiokol "RV-A-10", with a diameter of 79 centimeters (31 inches) and a length of 4.37 meters (14 feet 4 inches). A refined variant was used for the Sergeant battlefield missile. There had been doubts up to that time that it was practical to built large solid-fuel rocket grains, but the RV-A-10 proved beyond doubt that it was possible. The RV-A-10 led the way to the much larger grains for the three-stage Minuteman ICBM and the Polaris SLBM. The solid-rocket motor for the first stage of the Minuteman was an order of magnitude bigger than the RV-A-10, being 1.67 meters (5 feet 5.7 inches) in diameter and 7.42 meters (24 feet 4 inches) long. Both the Minuteman and Polaris had filament-wound final stages, though the first large-scale filament-wound stage had been flown on a Vanguard satellite launch vehicle in 1959. High-performance solid fuels were also introduced for the Minuteman and Polaris in later versions, and a later version of the Minuteman would also have a second stage with a titanium casing. Ironically, the US imported most of its titanium from the Soviet Union. Since there were very few civilian uses for titanium at the time, the Soviets had to be aware that it was mostly being used in American weapon systems. Work on large solid-fuel grains for the Minuteman and Polaris programs also led to the development of the first all-solid-fuel space launch vehicle, the LTV "Scout", which would have a long career putting small payloads into space. In addition, the Minuteman development effort had a direct connection to the development of segmented solid rocket motors, with Aerojet testing the concept in 1961 by the simple measures of cutting a Minuteman first stage in half and then splicing it back together with a lock ring joint. Both Aerojet and United Research, which would later become a component of the modern United Technology Center (UTC), performed further work and static test firings of segmented rocket boosters. In 1962, UTC won a contract from the USAF to build a five-segment SRB for the Titan III space launch vehicle. The resulting SRBs went into service in 1965, with two SRBs straddling the liquid-fuel Titan core. The initial Titan III SRB motor was 3.05 meters (10 feet) in diameter and 25.8 meters (84 feet 8 inches) long. It led in the 1980s to the 5.5 segment motor for the Titan 34D and the subsequent 7 segment motor for the Titan IV, which produces about 7,565 kN (771,000 kgp / 1.7 million lbf) thrust per SRB. The biggest solid-rocket motor ever to be put into operation is the SRB for the US space shuttle. Each SRB is 45.5 meters (149 feet 2 inches) long. The precise composition of the shuttle SRB grain by weight is:
69.6% 16.0% 12.4% 2.0% 0.4% ammonium perchlorate oxidizer aluminum booster polymer binder epoxy curing agent iron oxide combustion catalyst (thermite reaction with aluminum)
The shuttle SRBs are made up of four segments stacked on top of each other. The hole up the center of the SRBs is cone-shaped at the bottom, leading to an 11-point star that runs to the top. This scheme gives maximum thrust of 11,770 kN (1.2 million kgp / 2.65 million lbf) at liftoff, falling off to a sustained level of thrust after that. The nozzle is steerable.
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further combustion. This makes gels much safer to handle than their liquid forms. To get them to burn in a combustion chamber, they are fed under pressure through an orifice that turns them into an aerosol, allowing them to mix properly. The potential advantages of this approach are high energy density, throttleable operation, and relative safety in handling. Experiments have been performed in determining the suitability of gelled propellants for military missiles. The status of research into gelled fuels remains unclear.
Electric propulsion is a technology aimed at achieving thrust with high exhaust velocities, which results in a reduction in the amount of propellant required for a given space mission or application compared to other conventional propulsion methods. Reduced propellant mass can significantly decrease the launch mass of a spacecraft or satellite, leading to lower costs from the use of smaller launch vehicles to deliver a desired mass into a given orbit or to a deep-space target. In general, electric propulsion (EP) encompasses any propulsion technology in which electricity is used to increase the propellant exhaust velocity. There are many figures of merit for electric thrusters, but mission and application planners are primarily interested in thrust, specific impulse, and total efficiency in relating the performance of the thruster to the delivered mass and change in the spacecraft velocity during thrust periods. While thrust is self-explanatory, specific impulse (Isp) is defined as the propellant exhaust velocity divided by the gravitational acceleration constant g, which results in the unusual units of seconds. The total efficiency is the jet power produced by the thrust beam divided by the electrical power into the syste
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Other propellant materials, such as cesium and mercury, have been investigated in the past, but xenon is generally preferable because it is not hazardous to handle and process, it does not condense on spacecraft components that are above cryogenic temperatures, its large mass compared to other inert gases generates higher thrust for a given input power, and it is easily stored at high densities and low tank mass fractions. Therefore, the main focus will be on xenon as the propellant in ion and Hall thrusters, although performance with other propellants can be examined using the basic information provided here. In all electric propulsion the source of the electric power (nuclear, solar radiation receivers, or batteries) is physically separate from the mechanism that produces thrust. This type of propulsion has been handicapped by heavy and inefficient power sources. The thrust usually is low, typically 0.005 to 1 N. In order to allow a significant increase in the vehicle velocity, it is necessary to apply the low thrust and thus a small acceleration for a long time (week or months).
Simplified schematic diagram of arc-heating electric rocket propulsion system. The arc plasma temperature is very high (~ 15,000 K) and the anode, cathode, and chamber will get hot (1000 K) due to heat transfer.
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Propellant is heated electrically (by heated resistors or electric arcs) and hot gas is then thermodynamically expanded and accelerated to supersonic velocity through an exhaust nozzle (see Fig.) . These electrothermal units typically have thrust ranges of 0.01 to 0.5 N, with exhaust velocities of 1000 to 5000 m/sec, and ammonium, hydrogen, nitrogen, or hydrazine decomposition product gases have been used as propellants.
Simplified schematic diagram of a typical ion rocket, showing the approximate distribution of the electric power
Electric Thruster Types Electric thrusters are generally described in terms of the acceleration method used to produce the thrust. These methods can be easily separated into three categories: electro-thermal, electrostatic and electromagnetic. Common EP thruster types are described in the following. Resistojet Resistojets are electrothermal devices in which the propellant is heated by passing through a resistively heated chamber or over a resistively heated element before entering a downstream
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nozzle. The increase in exhaust velocity is due to the thermal heating of the propellant, which limits the Isp to low levels (<500 s). Arcjet
An arcjet is also an electrothermal thruster that heats the propellant by passing it though a high current arc in line with the nozzle feed system. While there is an electric discharge involved in the propellant path, plasma effects are insignificant in the exhaust velocity because the propellant is weakly ionized. The Isp is limited by the thermal heating to less than about 700 s H)-0.85--t)-2.260.977(i)-2.5f956417(af956417(a)3.15789(r)-7.65133(gi for easily stored propellants. phe(e)389(d)-0.956417(H)h.15789(
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The thruster was tested in a large space simulation chamber in the ESA Technology centre in the Netherlands at a remarkable 30,000 V and produced an ion exhaust plume that travelled at 210 km/s over four times faster than state-of-the-art ion engine designs achieve.
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Hughes demonstrated an ion engine on Sep. 27, 1961, at its research laboratories in Malibu. Stuhlinger was among those on hand to greet the scientific and technical writers who attended the event.
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Nuclear Propulsion
Introduction
For those who are interested in the exploration and development of space by humans, nuclear propulsion technology is a very attractive option. Why? Compared with the best chemical rockets, nuclear propulsion systems (NPS's) are more reliable and flexible for long-distance missions, and can achieve a desired space mission at a lower cost. The reason for these advantages in a nutshell is that NPS's can get "more miles per gallon" than a chemical rockets. Nuclear propulsion includes a wide variety of propulsion methods that use some form of nuclear reaction as their primary power source. Many military submarines, and, owing to crude prices and emissions, a growing number of large civilian surface ships, especially icebreakers, use nuclear reactors as their power plants (nuclear marine propulsion for civil use and nuclear navy for military use). In addition, various types of nuclear propulsion have been proposed, and some of them tested, for spacecraft applications:
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Antimatter catalyzed nuclear pulse propulsion Bussard ramjet Fission-fragment rocket Fission sail Fusion rocket Gas core reactor rocket Nuclear electric rocket Nuclear photonic rocket Nuclear pulse propulsion Nuclear salt-water rocket Nuclear thermal rocket Radioisotope rocket In a nuclear thermal rocket a working fluid, usually hydrogen, is heated to a high temperature in a nuclear reactor, and then expands through a rocket nozzle to create thrust. The nuclear reactor's energy replaces the chemical energy of the reactive chemicals in a traditional rocket engine. Due to the higher energy density of the nuclear fuel compared to chemical ones, about 107 times, the resulting efficiency of the engine is at least twice as good as chemical engines even considering the weight of the reactor, and even higher for advanced designs. The most traditional type uses a conventional (albeit light-weight) nuclear reactor running at high temperatures to heat the working fluid that is moving through the reactor core. This is known as the solid-core design, and is the simplest design to construct.
A solid-core design
The solid-core has the downside that it can only be run at temperatures below the melting point of the materials used in the reactor core.
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Since the efficiency of a rocket engine is strongly related to the temperature of the working fluid, the solid-core design needs to be constructed of materials that remain strong at as high a temperature as possible. Even the most advanced materials melt at temperatures below that which the fuel can actually create, meaning that much of the potential energy of the reactions is lost. Usually, with hydrogen propellant the solid-core design is expected to deliver specific impulses (Isp) on the order of 800 to 900 seconds, about twice that of liquid hydrogenoxygen designs such as the Space Shuttle main engine. Other propellants are sometimes proposed such as water or LOX; although they would provide reduced performance, their greater availability can reduce payload costs where the mission delta-v is not too high, for example within its lunar space or between Earth orbit and Martian orbit. The weight of a complete nuclear reactor is so great that solid-core engines would be hard-pressed to achieve a thrust-to-weight ratio of 1:1, which would be needed to overcome the gravity of the Earth on launch. Nevertheless the overall weight of the engine and fuel for a given amount of total impulse is lower. This means that solid-core engines are only really useful for upper-stage uses where the vehicle is already in orbit, or close to it, or launching from a lower gravity planet, moon or minor planet where the required thrust is lower. To be a useful Earth launch engine, the system would have to be either much lighter, or provide even higher specific impulse. Both would, of course, be even better.
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It may also be possible that solid core NTR's could be used in a future launch vehicle to supplement or replace chemical engines altogether. Advances in metallurgy and material science would be required to improve the durability and T/W ratio of NTR's for launch vehicle applications. An alternative approach to NTR's is to use the heat from nuclear reactor to generate electrical power through a converter, and then use the electrical power to operate various types of electrical thrusters (ion, hall-type, or magneto-plasma-dynamic (MPD)) that operate on a wide variety of propellants (hydrogen, hydrazine, ammonia, argon, xenon, fullerenes). This is how nuclear-electric propulsion (NEP) systems work. To convert the reactor heat into electricity, thermoelectric or thermionic devices could be used, but these have low efficiencies and low power to weight ratios. The alternative is to use a thermodynamic cycle with either a liquid metal (sodium, potassium), or a gaseous (helium) working fluid. These thermodynamic cycles can achieve higher efficiencies and power to weight ratios. No matter what type of power converter is used, a heat rejection system is needed, meaning that simple radiators, heat pipes, or liquid-droplet radiators would be required to get rid of the waste heat. Unlike ground-based reactors, space reactors cannot dump the waste heat into a lake or into the air with cooling towers. The electricity from the space nuclear reactor can be used to operate a variety of thrusters. Ion thrusters use electric fields to accelerate ions to high velocities. In principle, the only limit on the Isp that can be achieved with ion thrusters is the operating voltage and the power supply. Hall thrusters use a combination of magnetic fields to ionize the propellant gas and create a net axial electric field which accelerates ions in the thrust direction. MPD thrusters use either steady-state or pulsed electromagnetic fields to accelerate plasma (a mixture of ions and electrons) in the thrust direction. To get a high thrust density, ion thrusters typically use xenon, while Hall thrusters and MPD thrusters can operate quite well with argon or hydrogen. Compared with NTR's, NEP systems can achieve much higher Isp's. Their main problem is that they have a low power to weight ratio, a low thrust density, and hence a very low T/W ratio. This is due to the mass of the reactor, the heat rejection system, and the low-pressure operating regime of electrical thrusters. This makes NEP systems unfeasible for launch vehicle applications and mission scenarios where high accelerations are required; however, they can operate successfully in low-gravity environments such as LEO and interplanetary space.
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In contrast to a chemical rocket or an NTR which may operate only for several minutes to less than an hour at a time, an NEP system might operate continuously for days, weeks, perhaps even months, as the space vehicle slowly accelerates to meet its mission delta-V. An NEP system is well suited for unmanned cargo missions between the Earth, Moon and other planets. For manned missions to the outer planets, there would be a close competition between gas-core NTR's and high-thrust NEP systems. Conclusions The performance gain of nuclear propulsion systems over chemical propulsion systems is overwhelming. Nuclear systems can achieve space missions at a significantly lower cost due to the reduction in propellant requirements. When humanity gains the will to explore and develop space more ambitiously, nuclear propulsion will be an attractive choice. Robert H. Goddard, an American pioneer in astronautics and rocketry, made the following prophecy on October 3, 1907: "In conclusion then, the navigation of interplanetary space depends for its solution on the problem of atomic disintegration... Thus, something impossible will probably be accomplished through something else which has always been held equally impossible, but which remains so no longer".
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A higher exhaust velocity is desired, because less propellant will be required for a given space mission. A performance parameter that rocket engineers like to use is the specific impulse (Isp) which is simply the ratio of the thrust to the weight consumption rate of propellant (Isp = F / ( dm/dt * g) = vexhaust / g , g=9.81 m/s2) for example, if you have an engine with a specific impulse of 500 seconds, that means you have an exhaust velocity of 4905 m/s and your engine will produce 500 pounds of force for every pound of propellant it consumes per second.
Figure 1 shows a plot of the mass ratio (Minitial / Mfinal) for various mission V's and specific impulses. It is pretty clear from this diagram that a high specific impulse is desired to minimize the propellant requirements. The specific impulse, Isp, is a rocket engine's equivalent of an automobile's "miles per gallon" rating. Limitations of Chemical Rocket Engines In chemical rocket engines, such as the Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME), the chemical reaction between the hydrogen and oxygen releases heat which raises the combustion gases (steam and excess hydrogen gas) up to high temperatures (3000-4000 K). These hot gases are then accelerated through a thermodynamic nozzle, which converts thermal energy into kinetic energy, and hence provides thrust. The propellant and the heat source are one in the same. Because there is a limited energy release in chemical reactions and because a thermodynamic nozzle is being used to accelerate the combustion gases that do not have the minimum possible molecular weight, there is a limit on the exhaust velocity that can be achieved.
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The maximum Isp that can be achieved with chemical engines is in the range of 400 to 500 s. So, for example, if we have an Isp of 450 s, and a mission delta-V of 10 km/s (typical for launching into low earth orbit (LEO)), then the mass ratio will be 9.63. The problem here is that most of the vehicle mass is propellant, and due to limitations of the strength of materials, it may be impossible to build such a vehicle to just to ascend into orbit. Early rocket scientists got around this problem by building a rocket in stages, throwing away the structural mass of the lower stages once the propellant was consumed. This effectively allowed higher mass ratios to be achieved, and hence a space mission could be achieved with low-Isp engines. This is what all rockets do today, even the Space Shuttle. In spite of the relatively low Isp, chemical engines do have a relatively high thrust-toweight ratio (T/W)2. A high T/W (50-75) is necessary for a rocket vehicle to overcome the force of gravity on Earth and accelerate into space. The thrust of the rocket engines must compensate for the weight of the rocket engines, the propellant, the structural mass, and the payload. Although it is not always necessary, a high T/W engine will allow orbital and interplanetary space vehicles to accelerate quickly and reach there destinations in shorter time periods.
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Because the matter that serves as the medium of fusion must be so hot, it must be isolated from surrounding matter using powerful magnetic fields or inertial containment. This is the principle behind the Tokamak reactor. Still, fusion requires so much energy that no one has yet built a reactor that produces more than it consumes. The downsides to fission power include both radioactive byproducts and its association T ioi with nuclear weapons and meltdowns. In the last dec
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The fission reactions which we use to generate energy in nuclear power plants usually require an input of energy to start. The most common reaction is the splitting of the nucleus of specific types uranium atoms. To start nuclear fusion large amounts of energy are needed to force two atomic nuclei together. When the nuclei come together energy is released. Depending on the reaction that energy might be more or less than the energy required to initiate the reaction. Nuclear fusion is the reaction that ultimately drives the universe. Stars combine atomic nuclei, which releases the energy that we experience as heat and light. The most common reaction in stars is the combination of hydrogen nuclei to form helium. The energy input to cause this reaction to occur comes from the massive gravity in the star that overcomes all other forces to push atomic nuclei together. The attempts to generate energy on Earth from nuclear fusion are attempts to hold hydrogen in such high-energy environments to force this reaction to take place in a controlled manner. Thus far scientists have been unable to create such a controlled environment that is sustainable. There are many more fusion reactions in stars beyond the hydrogen to helium reaction, however. Deep within stars the pressures due to the gravity of the star push all kinds of nuclei together to form more and more complex atoms. It is believed that the source of all of the elements in the universe beyond hydrogen is due to such reactions deep within stars. Sometimes the elements that are created in the centers of the stars are unstable outside of that high-energy environment. When released from the center of stars through numerous types of cosmological incidents, these unstable atoms will start to break down or undergo fission. Some of these elements are so unstable that they will break down so fast we will never observe them in nature. Others are only slightly unstable and will last for millions or billions of years, on average. These are the radioactive elements that we are familiar with for fission reactions. One example of such an unstable atom is uranium-235. So named because of the number of neutrons and protons in its nucleus, U-235 survives, on average, about a billion years. This is known as its half-life. If you have one pound of U-235 it will naturally decay over about a billion years so that there is only a half of a pound of U-235 after that time and the rest is changed to something else. If we add energy to U-235, however, in the form of forcing another neutron into the nucleus of the atom, we create uranium 236 which is highly unstable and will break down very quickly, releasing energy in the process. This is the basis of the reaction in nuclear power plants. When a neutron of a specific energy is forced into the nucleus the atom will become unstable and it will split into two atoms with smaller nuclei. When that occurs, neutrons are released that are just the right energy to split additional atoms, causing what is known as a "chain reaction". This chain reaction will continue until many, many more atoms are split, releasing large amounts of energy.
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Controlled nuclear fusion is the "Holy Grail" of energy production. Fusion reactions combine relatively common isotopes of hydrogen into helium. The results of these reactions are stable atoms that don't undergo further reactions. Fission power plants, the ones that we are using now, however, use rare isotopes of unstable elements. The resulting atoms that are left over are also unstable. Those unstable atoms release radiation and must be carefully handled. As you can see, while both are nuclear reactions, there are enormous differences between fusion and fission. The study of both reactions is in the realm of nuclear physics and both can tell us a lot about the nature of the universe.
Solar Sail
Introduction Solar Sails are Spacecraft which utilize the momentum transfer of solar photons onto large, highly reflecting sails for passive propulsion. The idea of sailing is not new: Ziolkovsky (1921) and Zander (1924) introduced this 'exotic' idea for propulsion in space. The advantage is obvious: Solar Sails do not need to carry an active main propulsion system nor any propellant for it. Therefore, extended missions in our solar system and beyond seem possible. Through the continuous low thrust, trajectories could be realized which would allow planetary missions with high science priority to be performed. High energetic missions in particular, such as a Mercury orbiter mission, main belt asteroid and comet rendezvous as well as sample return missions could be realized within reasonable flight times. Some of these missions can not be reasonably performed with conventional propulsion. Against common impression, the low thrust level, moreover, does not necessarily increase flight time when compared to a conventional, chemically propelled spacecraft. For missions with high energy requirement very often multiple planetary flybys have to be introduced for chemical propulsion in order to allow the mission to be feasible, which in most cases increases flight time. Solar sail spiral trajectories do not necessarily require these gravity assists and can cut down trip times.
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Solar sails
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The goals of the study were: to evaluate the benefits of solar sails for planetary missions; to develop a solar sail technology roadmap; and, to study the feasibility of a joint DLR/NASA solar sail demonstration mission that could be performed at low-cost.
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science payload could provide remote sensing data of the Earth and also of previously not very well explored lunar areas. Solar sails (also called light sails or photon sails, especially when they use light sources other than the Sun) are a proposed form of spacecraft propulsion using large membrane mirrors. Radiation pressure is about 10-5 Pa at Earth's distance from the Sun and decreases by the square of the distance from the light source (e.g. sun), but unlike rockets, solar sails require no reaction mass. Although the thrust is small, it continues as long as the light source shines and the sail is deployed. Radiation pressure is the pressure exerted upon any surface exposed to electromagnetic radiation. If absorbed, the pressure is the power flux density divided by the speed of light. If the radiation is totally reflected, the radiation pressure is doubled. For example, the radiation of the Sun at the Earth has a power flux density of 1,370 W/m2, so the radiation pressure is 4.6 Pa (absorbed) In theory a lightsail (actually a system of lightsails) powered by an Earth-based laser could even be used to decelerate the spacecraft as it approaches its destination Solar collectors, temperature-control panels and sun shades are occasionally used as expedient solar sails, to help ordinary spacecraft and satellites make minor attitude control corrections and orbit modifications without using fuel. This conserves fuel that would otherwise be used for maneuvering and altitude control. A few have even had small purpose-built solar sails for this use. For example, EADS Astrium's Eurostar E3000 geostationary communications satellites use solar sail panels attached to their solar cell arrays to off-load transverse angular momentum, thereby saving fuel (angular momentum is accumulated over time as the gyroscopic momentum wheels control the spacecraft's attitude - this excess momentum must be offloaded to protect the wheels from over spin). The science of solar sails is well-proven, but the technology to manage large solar sails is still undeveloped. Mission planners are not yet willing to risk multimillion dollar missions on unproven solar sail unfolding and steering mechanisms. This neglect has inspired some enthusiasts to attempt private development of the technology, such as the Cosmos 1. The concept was first proposed by German astronomer Johannes Kepler in the seventeenth century. It was again proposed by Friedrich Zander in the late 1920s and gradually refined over the decades. Serious interest in lightsails began with an article by engineer and science fiction author Robert L. Forward in 1984.
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Applications
Robert L. Forward pointed out that a solar sail could be used to modify the orbit of a satellite around the Earth. In the limit, a sail could be used to "hover" a satellite above one pole of the Earth. Spacecraft fitted with solar sails could also be placed in close orbits about the Sun that are stationary with respect to either the Sun or the Earth, a type of satellite named by Forward a statite. This is possible because the propulsion provided by the sail offsets the gravitational potential of the Sun. Such an orbit could be useful for studying the properties of the Sun over long durations. Such a spacecraft could conceivably be placed directly over a pole of the Sun, and remain at that station for lengthy durations. Likewise a solar sail-equipped spacecraft could also remain on station nearly above the polar terminator of a planet such as the Earth by tilting the sail at the appropriate angle needed to just counteract the planet pnc678(e)3.16033.Td ofufirto 67424( mo )-80.6325(E)at671( )-210.881(b)-10.97 .6513-0.49588365(r)2.3674poo(t)-2.53536(a)336903(e)5(i)-2.53658(o)-0.956417ththerl
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Nozzleless Propulsion
Introduction
The concept of nozzleless rocket motors stems from the possibility of obtaining the required booster configuration in an integrated rocket ramjet type of vehicle. Despite the fact that expansion of the chamber gases cannot be effected in nozzleless system as efficiently as in nozzled rockets, an overall gain is still possible because of higher propellant loading in the given volume. Typically a performance gain of upto 15% has been projected by ISRO. In addition the system becomes much simpler leading to higher reliability. The most critical aspects of a nozzleless system are the choice of propellant and geometric configuration supplemented with a detailed understanding of erosive burning at lateral velocities extending into supersonic flow regime. The theoretical modeling of such systems has not yet come to a proven state. Earlier studies about the properties of a propellant suitable for nozzleless configuration have shown stringent demands on the burning rate characteristics, mechanical strength and strain capacity. Nozzleless propulsion system, the most advanced concept was successfully demonstrated by AFRPL, USA in 1979. It was expected that such a system will reduce the cost of production in view of the elimination of the nozzle assembly, the reduction of the case insulation requirements etc., and also will improve the reliability on account of the system simplicity. The properties required for an ideal propellant for a nozzleless configuration shows that:1. The burning rate of the propellant must be higher in order to prevent a long and inefficient tail off. 2. A superior strain capacity at low temperature in order to allow optimum web fraction, propellant loading and total performance is required and, 3. A higher stress capacity at high temperature so that the grain structure can survive the shear loads produced by the large axial pressure differential between the head end and aft-end of a burning nozzleless grain is also required. The above requirements reported by the ISRO shows that the cost of development and propellant ingredient are typically higher for nozzleless motor. However, it is reported that inspite of these factors, a straight forward nozzleless booster can be designed to yield comparable performance at a price reduction of about 10% and a performance gain of upto 15% if the propellant strength and burning-rate/pressure exponent can be optimized.
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On ignition of the grain, high volume of gas will be generated in the star portion of the grain (section AA) because of large surface area available. This gas will converge at the section CC and will flow through the tubular portion of the grain at section BB. The gas is expected to reach sonic condition at the interface of the conical and cylindrical section and accelerate to supersonic condition inside the tubular portion. Simultaneously, small amount of mass addition will take place inside the tubular portion due to the burning, which will progressively increase as a function of time. Due to the existence of long tubular portion, erosive burning of the grain in the tubular portion is expected. This will be further accelerated due to attainment of supersonic condition of the gas.
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Figures 2 shows the different phases of grain burning and the formation of nozzle shape due to the erosive burning inside the grain as described above. After the completion of the burning of the star portion, the gas will continue to be generated (much lesser quantity) by the conical portion of the grain, more or less as an end burning system. However, mass addition at the tubular portion will continue. This is expected to function till the propellant burns completely at the aft end section due to erosive burning. Beyond this time, a nozzle hardware system will be necessary. This will be provided with a silica phenolic throat insert embedded inside the grain as shown in the figure.
Additional Reading:
Sutton, G.P., Rocket Propulsion Elements, John Wiley & Sons Inc., New York, 7th Edn., 2001.
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