Lecture 25: Basic Turbomachine Performance Turbopump Pressurization Systems 1. Cycles
Lecture 25: Basic Turbomachine Performance Turbopump Pressurization Systems 1. Cycles
1. Cycles
The GG cycle was used in the F1 engine, and is also in use in the Delta II,
Atlas and Titan rockets. In this cycle, a small fraction of the pressurized oxidizer and
fuel are diverted to a medium-temperature burner (Gas Generator), which produces
typically very fuel-rich gas to drive the turbine or turbines. These are designed with a
large pressure ratio, and their exhaust is either dumped overboard, or injected at
some point into the main nozzle to provide some extra thrust. Nevertheless, this
cycle is inherently somewhat lossy, in that the turbine gas is not fully utilized in the
main combustor. On the other hand, the power control is relatively straightforward,
and there is little interaction of the feed system with the rest of the rocket. Any
propellant combination can be used, all power levels are suitable, and any desired
pressure level can be obtained although the Isp loss increase with pressure (1.5-4 sec
per 100 atm). The mechanical power required to drive the pumps is
• ∆POP • ∆PFP
PP = mox + mF (1)
ηoP ρox ηFP ρ F
where ∆POP and ∆PFP are the pressure rise in the oxidizer pump (OP) and fuel pump
(FP), respectively which have efficiencies ηOP , ηFP . Also ρox , ρF are the liquid densities.
•
If the gas generator mass flow rate is mGG , the (single) turbine power is
•
PT = mGG ηT cP' TnηTT
'
(2)
which depends on pressure ratio Pie / Pn and GG gas specify heat ratio, γ ' . Also, cP' is
the specific heat of this gas, and Tti its temperature, which is controlled through
stoichiometry to values acceptable by uncooled turbines (700-1100K).
Ref. 41: Turbopump System for Liquid Rocket Engines. NASA SP-8107, Aug. 1974.
⎡ γ ' −1
⎤
cGG = 2 cP' Tt .out ⎢1 − ( Pe / Pte ) γ ⎥ (4)
⎣ ⎦
where
(
Tt .out = Tn 1 − ηT ηTT
'
) (5)
This speed is generally lower than the main flow exit speed,
γ −1
c = 2 c p Tc η ; η = 1 − (Pe / Pc ) γ
(6)
where cp and η belong to the nozzle gas, and Pc , Tc , are the chamber pressure and
temperature. The relative Isp loss is:
and can be calculated once the turbine exhaust pressure Pte (and hence the turbine
pressure ratio) is selected. A tradeoff is involved here: if Pte is not very low, too
•
mGG
much mass must be diverted (large •
in Eq. 7), where as if Pte is too low, the
m
cGG
exhaust provides almost no additional thrust (small in Eq. 7). An optimum can
c
therefore be found.
•
As an example, consider the LOX-RP1 F-1 cycle, for which mox =1844 Kg/sec,
•
mF = 777 Kg / sec, ∆POP = 1.06 ×107 N / m2 , ∆PFP = 1.24 ×107 N / m2 , Tti = 1061 K and
ηOP = 0.746, ηFP = 0.726, ηT = 0.605. Also, ρox = 1145 Kg / m3 , ρF = 810 Kg / m3 . The GG
is estimated to have γ' = 1.35 and cp' = 2140 J / Kg / K , while the main gas has
γ = 1.25, cP = 2080 J / Kg / K . The chamber pressure is Pc = 95 atm, and at the exit, Pe
= 0.68 atm. Use of the equations above yields, after some searching, an “optimum”
δI
turbine pressure ratio of 23, for which sp = -0.0111. The actual F-1 engine had a
Isp
turbine pressure ratio of 16.4.
For engines, utilizing hydrogen (and possible methane) as fuel, the gas
generator can be eliminated. Instead, the fuel is simply routed from the exit manifold
of the nozzle cooling circuit to the turbine inlet. This is possible because hydrogen is
supercritical at the pump exit, and it simply expands smoothly into an ordinary gas
as it picks up heat. The resulting “Expander Cycle” is simple and efficient (the fuel is
fully utilized in the thrust chamber). This cycle is used in the RL-10 engine and in the
start-up sequence of the Japanese LE-5 engine (which then transitions to gas-
generatory operation).
The principle limitation of this cycle is the relativity small amount of heat
available from regenerative cooling, which limits applicability to chambe pressures
under approximately 70 atm. A simple analysis can demonstrate this point. The
pump power is given by Eq. (1) and the power derived from the fuel-driven turbine is
⎡ γ F −1
⎤
⎢ ⎛ Pinj ⎞ γF
⎥
PT = mFηT cPF Tι i ⎢1 − ⎜ ⎟ ⎥ (8)
P
⎢⎣ ⎝ ι i ⎠ ⎥⎦
where Pinj , the injector pressure, is also the turbine exhaust pressure. The turbine
while the oxidizer pump has ∆POP = Pinj − PTK . The shaft power balance then gives
1
⎛ ρF ⎞ 1 − δTK π T + δ cool − δTK ⎛ γ F −1
⎞
(O / F ) ⎜ ⎟ + =ψ ⎜1 − π T γ F ⎟
⎜ ⎟
(10)
⎝ ρox ⎠ ηOP ηFP ⎝ ⎠
where
Assuming δ TK = 0.1, δcool = 0.2, ηOP = ηNF = 0.7, O / F = 5 and ρF / ρox = 69/1140 = 0.0605 ,
the relationship between πT and ψ , as given by (10) is shown plotted in Fig. 2. As the
figure shows, the turbine inlet pressure increases rapidly when ψ drops below about 30
(at which point 1 = 1.33 ). In fact, as also shown in Fig. 2, the quantity ψ has a
πT
minimum value of approximately 17.76 when 1 = 2.68, below which no solution
πT
exists. The turbine inlet temperature Tti is 200K in the RL-10. Using also
ηT = 0.7, ρF = 69 kg / m3 and CPF = 14,600 J/Kg/K, we calculate from (11) ψ ≅ 1390 /
Pinj (atm) and so the maximum Pinj is 1390/17.76=78 atm. For reference, the RL-10 has
PC = 32 atm, Pinj ≅ 40 atm, which corresponds to ψ = 35. Of course, as (11) indicates,
higher Pinj values could be achieved if Tti could be increased further.
For rockets where high chamber pressure as well as high efficiency is desired,
the staged combustion cycle is the preferred choice. One could think of this as a
modified expander cycle, in which a small amount of oxidizer is added to the fuel
after the cooling circuit, thus increasing the available enthalpy for the turbine drive.
As in the expander cycle, all of the propellant is entirely used in the combustion
chamber. Unlike the expander, through, any oxidizer-fuel combination can be used.
Two prominent examples of this cycle are the Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME),
and the Russian RD-170 booster engine (Figs. 3 and 4 from Ref. 2). In the SSME, the
pre-burners are incorporated into separate fuel and oxidizer turbopump assemblies,
and process most of the fuel (LH) with a small fraction of the oxidizer (LOX),
producing a light “vitiated hydrogen” turbine driving gas. In the RD-170, the pre-
burners process all of the oxidizer (LOX) and a fraction of the fuel (kerosene) to
produce a fuel-lean gas which drives the single central turbine. In both cases, the
where hOTK and hFTK are the enthalpies of oxidizer and fuel in their tanks (this ignores
the low pressure booster pumps) rst is the stoichiometric O/F ratio and hf the fuel
heat value at the reference temperature Tref . The specific heat of the fuel-rich burnt
gas is cpti. Eq. (14) can be solved for rPB if ∆PFP is assumed known.
⎡ r ' −1
⎤
∆PFP ⎛
⎢1 − iP ⎞ r'
⎥
= S F (1 + rPB ) c pti Tn η FT (15)
ρ Fη FP ⎢ ⎝⎜ Pti ⎠⎟ ⎥
⎢⎣ ⎦⎥
where η FT is the turbine efficiency and γ ' = γ ti belongs to the pre-burner gas. A
similar balance can be written for the oxidizer turbopump, and, by division, we can
solve for the fuel split SF.
−1
⎡ η ρ η ⎛ ∆P ∆P ⎞ ⎤
S F = ⎢1 + FT F FP ⎜ r OP + rPB OPB ⎟ ⎥ (16)
⎣ ηOT ρ0 ∆PFP ⎝ ηOP ηOPB ⎠ ⎦
After rPB has been calculated from (14), SF is given by (16), and then (15) can be
used as a check on the assumed ∆PFP . In reality, an outer iteration loop is required
by the fact that γ ' and cpti themselves depend sensitively upon the preburner
stoichiometry, rPB. With the approximations cpH2 ≅ 7.67 cal / mol / K , and
c pH 2o ≅ 10.63 cal / mol / K
7.67+0.37rPB (17)
γ '=
5.68+0.37rPB
γ' R
cρti = ; M’ = 2 (1+rPB) g / mol (18)
γ '− 1 M 1
and also
r = 6, rst = 8, POTK =2 atm PFTK =1 atm, h f = 1.21x108 J/Kg, Tti =1100 K, η FP = 0.741
ηop =0.781, ηOBP = 0.696, η FT = 0.790, ηOT = 0.729,
∆Pcool = 0.15 Pc , ∆PPB =0.05 Pc ,
Qcool =7.40×105 J/kg, ∆Pi =Pi -Pc = 0.1 Pc
As shown in Fig. 6, the pressure rise in the fuel pump increases more steeply than
the chamber pressure, just as it did in the expander cycle. However, very high
pressures are now attainable. The ∆PFP for the SSME is shown for reference. Notice
how the pre-burner stoichiometry is essentially fixed by Tti , and does not vary much
over the pressure range.