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Rocket Prop Lecture 2

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Murali Krishna
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
6 views

Rocket Prop Lecture 2

Uploaded by

Murali Krishna
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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liquid prop.

solid prop.

liquid prop.

solid prop.

Rocket Propulsion AE411 21


GSLV MK III

 2S200 + L110 + C25


 3 stage vehicle
 Launch capability for GTO, LEO,
Polar and intermediate
circular orbits
 GTO P/L : 4.5 t
 LEO P/L : 10 t

Rocket Propulsion AE411 22


2014: Mars Orbiter Mission - Mangalyaan

Rocket Propulsion AE411 23


Introduction to rocket propulsion systems

 Propulsion  Derived from the Latin word “Propellere”


 pro = forward or before ; pellere = push
  pushing forward or “act of changing the
motion of the body”

 Rocket
 Device that produces the thrust by ejecting
stored matter called “propellant”

Rocket Propulsion AE411 24


 Propulsion

 (i) Duct/Air breathing - utilises mostly the surrounding medium as


the working fluid along with some stored fuel
- eg. turbojets , ramjets
 (ii) Rocket
- carries its own propellant

 Rocket Propulsion  act of imparting the momentum to the object


in space

Rocket Propulsion AE411 25


 Propulsion systems

 Energy source: chemical , nuclear, electric, solar

 Basic function: booster stage, sustainer, altitude control, orbit station


keeping etc

 Type of vehicle: aircraft, missile, assisted take off, space vehicle

 Type of propellant: solid, liquid, hybrid etc

 Size, type of construction, number of rocket propulsion units etc.

Rocket Propulsion AE411 26


Rocket propulsion engines

 Chemical – Nuclear – Solar – Electrical


 Definition and Fundamentals (inertial frame of reference, momentum,
impulse)
 rocket principle and rocket equation
 mass ratio of a rocket
 desirable parameters of a rocket
 propulsive efficiency
 performance parameters
 staging and clustering

Rocket Propulsion AE411 27


Rocket Propulsion Engines
Chemical Rockets

 Energy from a high-pressure combustion reaction of propellant chemicals


 Based on the physical state of propellant: liquid, solid, gaseous, hybrid
 Advantage: very large thrust/unit mass of rocket
 Disadvantage: thrust/unit mass flow rate of propellant is strictly limited by
the chemical energy of the propellant :-> propellant mass carried by the
vehicle/unit impulse is large!!!
 Liquid (liquid hydrogen, oxygen, kerosene) [Engines]
 monopropellant (hydrazine), bipropellant (H2/O2, HC/O2)

 Solid (composite ammonium perchlorate, nitrate)[Motors]


 Gaseous (air, nitrogen, helium)
 Hybrid (both solid and liquid propellant)

Rocket Propulsion AE411 28


Solid Propellant Rocket Motor

 Propellant = Energy source (chemical)


 Accelerator = Nozzle
 Energy Conversion = chemical to thermal energy (combustion)
 no feed systems or valves, lower impulse

Rocket Propulsion AE411 29


Liquid Propellant Rocket Engine

 Propellant = Energy source


(chemical)
 Accelerator = Nozzle
 Energy conversion = chemical to
thermal energy – (combustion)
 needs precision valves, feed
mechanisms (pumps, turbines etc),
higher impulse

Rocket Propulsion AE411 30


Gaseous propellant rocket engines

Propellant = Energy source


(storage pressure)
Accelerator = Nozzle
 Energy conversion = pressure
energy to kinetic energy
 requires large storage volumes
 thrust decrease with pressure,
 atitude control, manoeuvring,
astronaut maneuvering unit

Rocket Propulsion AE411 31


Hybrid Rocket Engine

 Propellant = Energy source (chemical)


 Accelerator = Nozzle
 Energy conversion = chemical to thermal energy (combustion)

Rocket Propulsion AE411 32


SpaceShipTwo & White Knight

Company – Scaled Composites


White Knight Two – jet powered
SpaceShipTwo – rocket (HTPB & Nitrous oxide hybrid engine)

Rocket Propulsion AE411 33


Integral Rocket-Ramjet Propulsion

 solid rocket propulsion for booster stage


 liquid ramjet propulsion for low-level flight
Electrical Rocket Propulsion Engines

 Electric propulsion is a generic name encompassing all of the ways of


accelerating a propellant using electrical power.

 Use electrical energy for heating and /or directly ejecting propellant, utilizing
an energy source that is independent of the propellant itself
 Electrothermal Thrusters (Resistojet, Arcjet)
 Non-thermal electrical Thrusters (Electrostatic or Ion Engines;
electromagnetic or magneto plasma engine)
 Handicapped by heavy and inefficient power sources

Rocket Propulsion AE411 35


Electrical Rocket Propulsion

Arc Heating Electric


Rocket Propulsion

One way to heat a stream of gas is to use a controlled electrical discharge


(arc).
Propellant = gas (eg. ammonium, H2, N2, Hydrazine decomposition
product gases)
 Energy Source = electrical (nuclear, solar or batteries)
 Accelerator = Nozzle
 Energy conversion = electrical to thermal to kinetic energy
 Very low thrust (0.005 – 1 N)
Rocket Propulsion AE411 36
Electrical Rocket Propulsion (Ion Engine)
2000 – 60,000 m/s

Propellant = neutral gas (eg. Xenon)


Energy Source = electrical (nuclear)
 Accelerator = high voltage electrostatic field across
electrodes
 Energy conversion = electrical to kinetic energy

Rocket Propulsion AE411 37


Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR)
 It can provide modulation of thrust and specfic impulse from a constant
radio frequency (RF) power source.
 It consists of three sections and the contact between the generated plasma
and wall is avoided by magnetic field present along the engine.
 Helicon antenna stage: Uses RF power to convert propellant gas into plasma.
 Ion Cyclotron Resonance Heating (ICRH) stage: Uses RF power to heat the plasma.
 Magnetic nozzle stage: Conversion of azimuthal motion into axial motion and plasma
detachment.

Source: Ad Astra Rocket Company

Rocket Propulsion AE411 38


Microwave Electrothermal Thruster (MET)

 Converts microwave energy into


thermal (or heat) energy.
 Three main parts; microwave
applicator, resonant cavity and the
nozzle
 Plasma arc is generated by transmitting
microwave power directly into the flow
region via antenna out of this region.
 Plasma heats the propellant gas which in turn changes into thrust due to
the expansion of the gas going through the nozzle
 Pros: The MET ranks higher than resistojets in performance (claimed to
provide higher specific impulse). Because microwaves can be collected
and fed directly into the thrust chamber, it is extremely compatible with
space transport. MET can be run on water vapor as a propellant
 Cons: lowest efficiency among most other electric propulsion systems.
Relatively low thrust compared to chemical rocket engines

Rocket Propulsion AE411 39


Nuclear Rockets

 Working fluid is heated by nuclear energy, which subsequently is expanded


in a nozzle and ejected to a high velocity
 Nuclear Thermal
 Nuclear Electrical
 Pulsed Nuclear

Nuclear Thermal

Rocket Propulsion AE411 40


Nuclear Thermal Rockets

Propellant = gas
Energy source = nuclear
Accelerator = Nozzle
 Energy conversion = nuclear to thermal to kinetic energy
 release of radioactive materials
 deep space applications

Rocket Propulsion AE411 41


Solar Rocket Propulsion Engines
 Solar energy is used to heat the working fluid and the hot gas is exhausted
through one or more nozzles
 Solar thermal rockets

 Propulsion power is derived from


being pushed by light reflecting
off of the mirror, instead of
traditional rocket engines
 Solar sail

Solar Sail
Solar sailing applet: “Solar Sailing School”

Rocket Propulsion AE411 42


Solar Thermal Rocket (concept)

Propellant = gas
Energy source = solar
Accelerator = Nozzle
 Energy conversion = solar to
thermal to kinetic energy
 deployed outside atmosphere
 storage and refuelling of working
fluid is challenging

Rocket Propulsion AE411 43


Selection of Rockets

Non-space mission Solid (1-2 or 1-4 stages), Solid or liquid


(2-3 stages, very high acceleration)
Launch to space Solid, liquid or combinations (2-4
stages), hybrid (2-4 stages)
Impulsive V in space (time-critical Small solid prop (apogee kick, etc),
maneuvers, energy change from elliptic Mono or Bi-propellant liquids (storable)
orbits, non-fuel limited situations
Low-thrust V in space (mass-limited Solar-electric systems: Arcjets (a bit
missions, non time-critical missions, faster, less Isp, Hall, Ion (slower, higher
continuous orbit corrections, near Isp)
circular orbits…) Nuclear-electric systems, Direct solar-
thermal, Pulsed Plasma Thruster (PPT)

Rocket Propulsion AE411 44

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