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Inherent stability of central element coaxial liquid-liquid injectorsMost TRW liquid bi-propellant rocket engines built over the past thirty-plus years have employed a central element coaxial pintle injector and have operated with liquid/liquid propellant injection. This injector is a patented design exclusive to TRW and has unique features that make the rocket engine combustion characteristics different from those of other types of injector engine designs. Its many benefits include excellent combustion performance, efficient deep throttling, adaptability to low cost manufacturing, and high reliability. Approximately 200 pintle injector engines of various sizes and operating on a variety of propellants have been flown without a single inflight failure. An especially important feature of the pintle injector engine is its apparent inherent combustion stability. In over thirty years of development, testing, and production, TRW has never experienced combustion instability in any of its pintle injector engine designs. This has been true of engines operating over a range of thrust from 5 to 250,000 lbs. on earth-storable hypergolic propellants and a large number of smaller engines operating on a variety of propellants (21 combinations) in long duration-firing, pulsing (down to 2 msec), and deep throttling (as much as 19:1) modes. Operating chamber pressures have ranged from 10 to 3,500 psia. This record is particularly impressive given that typical TRW design practice does not consider combustion instability as an issue and no pintle engine has ever employed stability-enhancing features, such as baffles or acoustically resonant chambers. In spite of this, TRW engines have operated stably in regimes not possible with other types of injectors. Various physical explanations and combustion process models for this favorable stability characteristic have been postulated. However, a definitive study that unequivocally establishes the important stabilizing mechanisms still remains to be conducted.
Document ID
19940018570
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Other
Authors
Stoddard, Frank J.
(TRW Defense and Space Systems Group Redondo Beach, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
November 1, 1993
Publication Information
Publication: Pennsylvania State Univ., NASA Propulsion Engineering Research Center, Volume 2
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Heat Transfer
Accession Number
94N23043
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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