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CFD Analysis of Modular Thrusters PerformanceThe effective performance of modular thrusters in an aerospike configuration is difficult to determine. Standard analytical tools are applicable to conventional nozzle shapes, but are limited when applied to an aerospike nozzle (An aerospike nozzle is an altitude compensating external nozzle). Three baseline nozzle shapes are derived using standard analytical procedures. The baseline nozzle sizes are restricted to fill a volume envelope. The three shapes are an axi-symmetric round nozzle, a two dimensional planar square exit nozzle, and a super elliptic round to nearly square nozzle. The integrated (thruster/aerospike) performance of the three nozzles is determined through the use of three dimensional viscous computational fluid dynamic (CFD) calculation where complex features of the flow field can be accurately captured. The resulting installed performance is then used to evaluate the efficiency of these nozzle shapes for aerospike applications. The determination of effective performance of a thruster nozzle integrated into an aerospike nozzle require the solution of the three dimensional turbulent Navier-Stokes equations. The model used in this study consisted of two zones; one of the upstream thruster cowl surface so freestream conditions can be accurately predicted, and two, the aerospike surface beginning with the thruster outflow and extending to the end of the aerospike surface. The numerical grid consisted of over 120,000 nodes and used symmetry on the thruster centerline and edge. A two species non-reacting chemistry model was used to capture the variation of fluid properties between the hot plume base and freestream air. From the results of the three baseline nozzle aerospike calculations, the effictive performance of the nozzle was determined. The flow fields of these calculations do show some variation between the cases. Recirculation zones on the cowl surface is predicted for the two dimensional planar nozzle and a smaller one for the super elliptic nozzle. The recirculation is caused by the strong pressure gradient between the plume and freestream flows. The axi-symmetric nozzle results indicate recirculation zones on the thruster face. These recirculation zones smooth the pressure gradient between the plume and freestream flow limiting the formation of recirculation on the cowl surface. Thruster to thruster interaction is evident for the axi-symmetric and supper elliptic calculation while the two dimensional planar nozzle did not have any lateral expansion in the nozzle, so thruster to thruster interaction is limited. The integrated performance results, at the altitude choosen, show very little variation between the three thruster shapes. This result allows for nozzle shape determination based on additional considerations (thermal, structural, weight) besides performance.
Document ID
19960029261
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Ungewitter, Ronald J.
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA United States)
Beck, James
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA United States)
Ketchum, Andrew
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 1996
Publication Information
Publication: Thirteenth Workshop for Computational Fluid Dynamic Applications in Rocket Propulsion and Launch Vehicle Technology
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Heat Transfer
Accession Number
96N29757
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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