Where do you put the heaters?
Quote from: BarryKirk on 12/31/2018 02:30 pmWhere do you put the heaters?You have these hot, fiery engines that need cooling...
Quote from: jpo234 on 12/31/2018 02:34 pmQuote from: BarryKirk on 12/31/2018 02:30 pmWhere do you put the heaters?You have these hot, fiery engines that need cooling...What do you use when your engines are cold.
I've tried to find a list of vehicles that use autogenous pressurisation, without any luck.From what I understand, STS used it on both propellants, and Centaur uses it for the H2 only. ACES (or is it ICES?) may use it for both propellants as part of the Integrated Vehicle Fluids upgrade.Can anybody add to this list please?
However, the reduced thrust to weight ratio of the engine could be a problem. At least during the initial boost stage.
Quote from: ThomasGadd on 12/31/2018 04:27 pmQuote from: jpo234 on 12/31/2018 02:34 pmQuote from: BarryKirk on 12/31/2018 02:30 pmWhere do you put the heaters?You have these hot, fiery engines that need cooling...What do you use when your engines are cold.IANARS but I don't think there is a problem here. A cryogenic propellant will want to boil off to some degree, just not fast enough to keep up with an engine draining the tank. So your starting pressure is already there, and by the time you have to start worrying about lack of tank pressure, the engine will be up to temperature.
Can anyone give us an educated guestimate of the rough process likely to be used to fire up a raptor engine?I assume they don’t just open all of the valves fire an igniter and hope for the best? This would help understand at what point the autogenous pressurisation kicks in or how long it takes to build
It’s also going to be a very interesting control loop.Certainly the outer loop will have a process value of tank pressure.But there has to be a loop controlling the heat flow.Reaction time has to be fairly quick and temperature loops tend to be fairly slow acting at least with temperature loops I’ve set up in the past.Having said that most of my experience has been with processes that are very slow acting.
Quote from: BarryKirk on 12/31/2018 08:44 pmIt’s also going to be a very interesting control loop.Certainly the outer loop will have a process value of tank pressure.But there has to be a loop controlling the heat flow.Reaction time has to be fairly quick and temperature loops tend to be fairly slow acting at least with temperature loops I’ve set up in the past.Having said that most of my experience has been with processes that are very slow acting.The gases are tapped off the engine in such a way as to obtain the correct temperature. I don't know if temperature regulation is active or passive. A active pressure regulation and distribution system controls the flow to maintain the proper tank pressure.John
I would guess that liquids are pumped around the engine which heats them up, vaporizes them and then the hot gases are piped to the top of the fuel tank. This effectively makes the pipes surrounding the engine the heat exchanger.
Quote from: livingjw on 12/31/2018 09:14 pmQuote from: BarryKirk on 12/31/2018 08:44 pmIt’s also going to be a very interesting control loop.Certainly the outer loop will have a process value of tank pressure.But there has to be a loop controlling the heat flow.Reaction time has to be fairly quick and temperature loops tend to be fairly slow acting at least with temperature loops I’ve set up in the past.Having said that most of my experience has been with processes that are very slow acting.The gases are tapped off the engine in such a way as to obtain the correct temperature. I don't know if temperature regulation is active or passive. A active pressure regulation and distribution system controls the flow to maintain the proper tank pressure.JohnI'm struggling to understand how the gases are tapped off the engine to obtain the correct temperature. More specifically, what that correct temperature should be.I'm just going to focus on the fuel tank, I'm assuming the oxidizer tank will have similar issues.I would guess that liquids are pumped around the engine which heats them up, vaporizes them and then the hot gases are piped to the top of the fuel tank. This effectively makes the pipes surrounding the engine the heat exchanger. So, several things, say process values that can be adjusted.1. The flow (volume/sec ) of liquid introduced to the heat exchanger.2. Maybe the percentage of the heat exchanger in use at any given time.Remember that for a fixed size heat exchanger, if one limits the fluid flow, then the output gases are probably going to be hotter.One has to remember that as the hot gases enter the fuel tank, they will cool off and the pressure will drop.Since, certainly at the beginning of the stage first burn, the fuel is near the freezing point, it's possible that some of the gases in contact with the super cold liquid could condense back to a liquid themselves.Here is an issue I see. Lets say after SECO there is a coast phase. During that coast phase, the engines, and hence the heat source is turned off.However, during that time, the gases in the tank will cool off, thus dropping the pressure. Since SECO occurs when the stage is outside the atmo, there is no danger of the pressure dropping below the external pressure. And since, the rockets are off, there won't be forces causing the walls to buckle.However, when restarting for a second or later burn, one has to hope that there is sufficient pressure to prevent buckling before additional gas can be created.
Snip...I'm struggling to understand how the gases are tapped off the engine to obtain the correct temperature. More specifically, what that correct temperature should be.Snip...