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Oxygen/hydrogen Space Station propulsion system concept definition for IOCThe potential for the reduction in propulsion system life cycle costs through the use of on-board water electrolysis to generate oxygen and hydrogen propellants, as well as the potential advantages of improved system safety and contamination impact, led to a study to evaluate candidate oxygen-/hydrogen-based propulsion systems. In this study a representative set of propulsion system requirements were compiled and candidate oxygen/hydrogen-based propulsion systems synthesized. These candidate concepts were screened and a systems evaluation was performed on the remaining eight candidate concepts. Detailed system schematics were prepared. Operational design conditions were determined and system weight, volume, energy requirements, and costs were calculated. Evaluation results indicated that the oxygen/hydrogen propulsion systems can provide simple, low cost, and viable systems for the IOC Space Station. Based on these data, a relative concept evaluation was conducted using as selection criteria reliability, safety, cost, technical risk, contamination, operational utility, growth potential, and integration potential. Top ranked candidate systems were recommended to NASA/MSFC for consideration for the IOC Space Station.
Document ID
19860057976
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Shoji, J. M.
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA, United States)
Meisl, C. J.
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA, United States)
Glass, J. F.
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA, United States)
Tu, W.-H.
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA, United States)
Ebert, S. J.
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA, United States)
Evans, S. A.
(Rockwell International Corp. Rocketdyne Div., Canoga Park, CA, United States)
Jones, L. W.
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA, United States)
Campbell, H.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1986
Subject Category
Spacecraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
AIAA PAPER 86-1561
Accession Number
86A42714
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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