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Aeroelastic Modeling of a Nozzle Startup TransientLateral nozzle forces are known to cause severe structural damage to any new rocket engine in development during test. While three-dimensional, transient, turbulent, chemically reacting computational fluid dynamics methodology has been demonstrated to capture major side load physics with rigid nozzles, hot-fire tests often show nozzle structure deformation during major side load events, leading to structural damages if structural strengthening measures were not taken. The modeling picture is incomplete without the capability to address the two-way responses between the structure and fluid. The objective of this study is to develop a tightly coupled aeroelastic modeling algorithm by implementing the necessary structural dynamics component into an anchored computational fluid dynamics methodology. The computational fluid dynamics component is based on an unstructured-grid, pressure-based computational fluid dynamics formulation, while the computational structural dynamics component is developed under the framework of modal analysis. Transient aeroelastic nozzle startup analyses at sea level were performed, and the computed transient nozzle fluid-structure interaction physics presented,
Document ID
20140011604
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Wang, Ten-See
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Zhao, Xiang
(Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical Univ. Huntsville, AL, United States)
Zhang, Sijun
(ESI CFD, Inc. Huntsville, AL, United States)
Chen, Yen-Sen
(Hsinchu Univ. Hsinchu, Taiwan, Province of China)
Date Acquired
September 12, 2014
Publication Date
June 16, 2014
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Thermodynamics
Spacecraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
M13-3089
Report Number: M13-3089
Meeting Information
Meeting: AIAA Applied Aerodynamics Conference
Location: Atlanta, GA
Country: United States
Start Date: June 16, 2014
End Date: June 20, 2014
Sponsors: American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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