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Experimental Evaluation of Rocket Exhaust Diffusers for Altitude SimulationAn experimental investigation of exhaust diffusers has been conducted to evaluate various methods of minimizing the overall pressure ratio (from chamber to ambient pressure) required to establish and maintain full expansion of the nozzle flow (altitude simulation). Exhaust-diffuser configurations investigated were (1) cylindrical diffusers, (2) diffusers with contraction, and (3) diffusers including a right-angle turn. Cylindrical diffusers were evaluated with primary nozzles of various area ratios and types, as well as two clustered configurations; the other diffusers were evaluated with individual nozzles of constant area ratio and varied type. Air was the working fluid, except for two check points obtained with JP-4 fuel and liquid-oxygen rocket engines and cylindrical diffusers. The minimum length-diameter ratio of cylindrical diffusers was about 6 for minimum pressure-ratio requirements. With cylindrical diffusers of adequate length, the pressure-ratio requirements were primarily a function of the ratio of diffuser to nozzle-throat areas and were essentially independent of primary-nozzle type (including two clustered configurations) or area ratio. The two check points obtained with rocket engines indicated the pressure-ratio requirements at given ratios of diffuser to nozzle-throat areas were lowered, as compared with the requirements with air, as a result of the reduced ratio of specific heats. The minimum length-diameter ratio of the contraction throat of convergent-divergent diffusers was also about 6 for minimum pressure-ratio requirements. With adequate contraction-throat length, the pressure-ratio requirements of such diffusers were appreciably below those of comparable cylindrical diffusers when used with conical and cutoff-isentropic nozzles, but not when used with a bell nozzle. Minimum pressure-ratio requirements of a diffuser including a simple long-radius right-angle turn at maximum diffuser area, obtained with the center of radius of the turn a minimum of 2 diffuser diameters downstream of the nozzle exit, were not appreciably above those of a comparable optimum cylindrical diffuser. A diffuser including a long-radius right-angle turn at a contraction minimum area had somewhat lower pressure-ratio requirements than the aforementioned simple turn.
Document ID
19980227801
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Other - NASA Technical Note (TN)
Authors
Sivo, Joseph N.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Meyer, Carl L.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Peters, Daniel J.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 1960
Subject Category
Spacecraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
NASA-TN-D-298
E-593
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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