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HYPERFIREThe two main sub-scale, ground-based rocket aerodynamics testing techniques – hot-fire testing and cold-flow testing – pose a series of tradeoffs. Hot-fire testing is generally much more accurate, but is often burdensome, costly, and requires long lead times due to design work, infrastructure preparation, etc. Cold-flow testing is much less expensive and has a rapid turnaround time, but conventional simulants (e.g., nitrogen, steam) used in cold-flow testing yield less accurate results (i.e., results that are not sufficiently representative of test article performance). While researching methods to optimize such tradeoffs, engineers at NASA’s Stennis Space Center discovered that ethane can be tuned to approximate rocket exhaust plumes generated by several common rocket propellants. This led NASA to develop the HYdrocarbon Propellants Enabling Reproduction of Flows in Rocket Engines (HYPERFIRE), a sub-scale, non-reacting flow test system. HYPERFIRE uses heated ethane to enable physical simulation of rocket engines powered by a broad range of propellants in an inexpensive, accurate, and simple fashion.
Document ID
20220002033
Acquisition Source
Stennis Space Center
Document Type
Other - Technology Solution
Authors
Daniel Ray Jones
(Stennis Space Center Bay Saint Louis, Mississippi, United States)
Date Acquired
February 4, 2022
Publication Date
February 7, 2022
Publication Information
Subject Category
Ground Support Systems And Facilities (Space)
Report/Patent Number
SSC-00598
SSC-00561
SSC-TOPS-12
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 981271.08.31.50.64.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Patent
63/260,627
Patent Application
Technical Review
NASA Technical Management
Keywords
sub-scale
rocket
aerodynamics
cold-flow
inexpensive
hydrocarbon
ethane
Schlieren
low temperature
velocimetry
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