An essential part of the design of a liquid rocket engine is the thermal analysis of the thrust chamber, which is a component whose operative life is limited by the maximum allowable wall temperature and heat flux. A simplified steady-state thermal analysis model for regeneratively cooled rocket engine thrust chambers is presented. The model is based on semi-empirical correlations for the hot-gas and coolant convective heat transfer and on an original multi-zone approach for the wall conduction. The hot-gas heat transfer is calibrated with experimental data taken from an additively manufactured water-cooled nozzle that is connected to a combustion chamber either fed with decomposed hydrogen peroxide or decomposed hydrogen peroxide and automotive diesel. The thrust chamber (i.e., combustion chamber and nozzle) is designed to produce about 450 N of thrust when operating with a chamber pressure of 11 bar. For this application, the calibrated model predicts the total wall heat transfer rate very accurately and the temperature distribution within the wall structure with an uncertainty of a few tens of kelvins. This level of accuracy can be considered more than adequate for the design, and generally for engineering-type thermal analysis, of similar thrust chambers.
A Simplified Thermal Analysis Model for Regeneratively Cooled Rocket Engine Thrust Chambers and Its Calibration with Experimental Data
Barato F.;
2023
Abstract
An essential part of the design of a liquid rocket engine is the thermal analysis of the thrust chamber, which is a component whose operative life is limited by the maximum allowable wall temperature and heat flux. A simplified steady-state thermal analysis model for regeneratively cooled rocket engine thrust chambers is presented. The model is based on semi-empirical correlations for the hot-gas and coolant convective heat transfer and on an original multi-zone approach for the wall conduction. The hot-gas heat transfer is calibrated with experimental data taken from an additively manufactured water-cooled nozzle that is connected to a combustion chamber either fed with decomposed hydrogen peroxide or decomposed hydrogen peroxide and automotive diesel. The thrust chamber (i.e., combustion chamber and nozzle) is designed to produce about 450 N of thrust when operating with a chamber pressure of 11 bar. For this application, the calibrated model predicts the total wall heat transfer rate very accurately and the temperature distribution within the wall structure with an uncertainty of a few tens of kelvins. This level of accuracy can be considered more than adequate for the design, and generally for engineering-type thermal analysis, of similar thrust chambers.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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