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The Determination of Forces and Moments on a Gimballed SRM Nozzle Using a Cold Flow ModelThe Solid Rocket Motor Air Flow Facility (SAF) at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center was used to characterize the flow in the critical aft end and nozzle of a solid propellant rocket motor (SRM) as part of the design phase of development. The SAF is a high pressure, blowdown facility which supplies a controlled flow of air to a subscale model of the internal port and nozzle of a SRM to enable measurement and evaluation of the flow field and surface pressure distributions. The ASRM Aft Section/Nozzle Model is an 8 percent scale model of the 19 second burn time aft port geometry and nozzle of the Advanced Solid Rocket Motor, the now canceled new generation space Shuttle Booster. It has the capability to simulate fixed nozzle gimbal angles of 0, 4, and 8 degrees. The model was tested at full scale motor Reynolds Numbers with extensive surface pressure instrumentation to enable detailed mapping of the surface pressure distributions over the nozzle interior surface, the exterior surface of the nozzle nose and the surface of the simulated propellant grain in the aft motor port. A mathematical analysis and associated numerical procedure were developed to integrate the measured surface pressure distributions to determine the lateral and axial forces on the moveable section of the nozzle, the effective model thrust and the effective aerodynamic thrust vector (as opposed to the geometric nozzle gimbal angle). The nozzle lateral and axial aerodynamic loads and moments about the pivot point are required for design purposes and require complex, three dimensional flow analyses. The alignment of the thrust vector with the nozzle geometric centerline is also a design requirement requiring three dimensional analyses which were supported by this experimental program. The model was tested with all three gimbal angles at three pressure levels to determine Reynolds number effects and reproducibility. This program was successful in demonstrating that a measured surface pressure distribution could be integrated to determine the lateral and axial loads, moments and thrust vector alignment for the scaled model of a large space booster nozzle. Numerical results were provided which are scaleable to the full scale rocket motor and can be used as benchmark data for 3-D CFD analyses.
Document ID
19970012356
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Technical Memorandum (TM)
Authors
Whitesides, R. Harold
(ERC, Inc. Huntsville, AL United States)
Bacchus, David L.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL United States)
Hengel, John E.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL United States)
Date Acquired
August 17, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1994
Subject Category
Spacecraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.15:112087
NASA-TM-112087
AIAA Paper 94-3292
Meeting Information
Meeting: Joint Propulsion Conference
Location: Indianapolis, IN
Country: United States
Start Date: June 27, 1994
End Date: June 29, 1994
Sponsors: Society of Automotive Engineers, Inc., American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, American Society for Electrical Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Accession Number
97N70950
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS8-39095
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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