NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
CFD flowfield simulation of Delta Launch Vehicles in a power-on configurationThis paper summarizes recent work at McDonnell Douglas Aerospace (MDA) to develop and validate computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations of under expanded rocket plume external flowfields for multibody expendable launch vehicles (ELVs). Multi engine reacting gas flowfield predictions of ELV base pressures are needed to define vehicle base drag and base heating rates for sizing external nozzle and base region insulation thicknesses. Previous ELV design programs used expensive multibody power-on wind tunnel tests that employed chamber/nozzle injected high pressure cold or hot-air. Base heating and pressure measurements were belatedly made during the first flights of past ELV's to correct estimates from semi-empirical engineering models or scale model tests. Presently, CFD methods for use in ELV design are being jointly developed at the Space Transportation Division (MDA-STD) and New Aircraft Missiles Division (MDA-NAMD). An explicit three dimensional, zonal, finite-volume, full Navier-Stokes (FNS) solver with finite rate hydrocarbon/air and aluminum combustion kinetics was developed to accurately compute ELV power-on flowfields. Mississippi State University's GENIE++ general purpose interactive grid generation code was chosen to create zonal, finite volume viscous grids. Axisymmetric, time dependent, turbulent CFD simulations of a Delta DSV-2A vehicle with a MB-3 liquid main engine burning RJ-1/LOX were first completed. Hydrocarbon chemical kinetics and a k-epsilon turbulence model were employed and predictions were validated with flight measurements of base pressure and temperature. Zonal internal/external grids were created for a Delta DSV-2C vehicle with a MB-3 and three Castor-1 solid motors burning and a Delta-2 with an RS-27 main engine (LOX/RP-1) and 9 GEM's attached/6 burning. Cold air, time dependent FNS calculations were performed for DSV-2C during 1992. Single phase simulations that employ finite rate hydrocarbon and aluminum (solid fuel) combustion chemistry are currently in progress. Reliable and efficient Eulerian algorithms are needed to model two phase (solid-gas) momentum and energy transfer mechanisms for solid motor fuel combustion products.
Document ID
19950017013
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Pavish, D. L.
(McDonnell-Douglas Aerospace Huntington Beach, CA, United States)
Gielda, T. P.
(McDonnell-Douglas Aerospace Huntington Beach, CA, United States)
Soni, B. K.
(Mississippi State Univ. Starkville, MS., United States)
Deese, J. E.
(McDonnell-Douglas Aerospace Saint Louis, MO., United States)
Agarwal, R. K.
(Mississippi State Univ. Starkville, MS., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 1993
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Marshall Space Flight Center, Eleventh Workshop for Computational Fluid Dynamic Applications in Rocket Propulsion
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Heat Transfer
Accession Number
95N23433
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available