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Liquid rocket engine nozzles, NASA SPACE VEHICLE DESIGN CRITERIA (Chemical)

NASA/SP-8120, Liquid rocket engine nozzles, NASA SPACE VEHICLE DESIGN CRITERIA (Chemical), NASA Lewis Research Center (Cleveland, OH, United States), July,1976, pp. 120, Format(s): PDF 6275k

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The nozzle is a major component of a rocket engine, having a significant influence on the overall engine performance and representing a large fraction of the engine structure. The design of the nozzle consists of solving simultaneously two different problems: the definition of the shape of the wall that forms the expansion surface, and the delineation of the nozzle structure and hydraulic system. This monography addresses both of these problems. The shape of the wall is considered from immediately upstream of the throat to the nozzle exit for both bell and annular(or plug) nozzles. Important aspects of the methods used to generate nozzle wall shapes are covered for maximum-performance shapes and for nozzle contours based on criteria other than performance. The discussion of structure and hydraulics covers problem areas of regeneratively cooled tube-wall nozzles and extensions; it treats also nozzle extensions cooled by turbine exhaust gas, ablation-cooled extensions, and radiation-cooled extensions. The techniques that best enable the designer to develop the nozzle structure with as little difficulty as possible and at the lowest cost consistent with minimum weight and specified performance are described.
Keywords:spacecraft propulsion and power, liquid propellant rocket engines, nozzle design, rocket nozzles, structural design criteria, aerospace engineering, performance prediction, spacecraft, structural weight, weight reduction
CASI Document ID Number:77N16108
Subjects:Astronautics: Spacecraft Propulsion And Power
ID Code:186
Deposited On:06 June 2002