NASA/SP-8124, Liquid rocket engine self-cooled combustion chambers, NASA SPACE VEHICLE DESIGN CRITERIA (Chemical), NASA Lewis Research Center (Cleveland, OH, United States), September,1977, pp. 130, Format(s): PDF 13286k |
Self-cooled combustion chambers are chambers in which the chamber wall temperature is controlled by methods other than fluid flow within the chamber wall supplied from an external source. In such chambers, adiabatic wall temperature may be controlled by use of upstream fluid components such as the injector or a film-coolant ring, or by internal flow of self-contained materials; e.g. pyrolysis gas flow in charring ablators, and the flow of infiltrated liquid metals in porous matrices. Five types of self-cooled chambers are considered in this monograph. The name identifying the chamber is indicative of the method (mechanism) by which the chamber is cooled, as follows: ablative; radiation cooled; internally regenerative (Interegen); heat sink; adiabatic wall. Except for the Interegen and heat sink concepts, each chamber type is discussed separately. A separate and final section of the monograph deals with heat transfer to the chamber wall and treats Stanton number evaluation, film cooling, and film-coolant injection techniques, since these subjects are common to all chamber types. Techniques for analysis of gas film cooling and liquid film cooling are presented.
| Keywords: | spacecraft propulsion and power, combustion chambers, cooling systems, liquid propellant rocket engines, temperature control, ablation, adiabatic conditions, heat sinks, internal flow, wall temperature |
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| CASI Document ID Number: | 78N21211 |
| Subjects: | Astronautics: Spacecraft Propulsion And Power |
| ID Code: | 188 |
| Deposited On: | 06 June 2002 |