NASA/TM-108482, Cleary, N.L. and Holt, K.A. and Flachbart, R.H., Simplified Liquid Oxygen Propellant Conditioning Concepts, Prepared by Propulsion Laboratory, Science and Engineering Directorate, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, March 1995, pp. 66, Format(s): PDF 2058k |
Current liquid oxygen feed systems waste propellant and use hardware, unnecessary during flight, to condition the propellant at the engine turbopumps prior to launch. Simplified liquid oxygen propellant conditioning concepts are being sought for future launch vehicles. During a joint program, four alternative propellant conditioning options were studied: (1) passive recirculation; (2) low bleed through the engine; (3) recirculation lines; and (4) helium bubbling. The test configuration for this program was based on a vehicle design which used a main recirculation loop that was insulated on the downcomer and uninsulated on the upcomer. This produces a natural convection recirculation flow. The test article for this program simulated a feedline which ran from the main recirculation loop to the turbopump. The objective was to measure the temperature profile of this test article. Several parameters were varied from the baseline case to determine their effects on the temperature profile. These parameters included: flow configuration, feedline slope, heat flux, main recirculation loop velocity, pressure, bleed rate, helium bubbling, and recirculation lines. The heat flux, bleed rate, and recirculation configurations produced the greatest changes from the baseline temperature profile. However, the temperatures in the feedline remained subcooled. Any of the options studied could be used in future vehicles
| Keywords: | propellant conditioning, liquid oxygen, liquid nitrogen, main propulsion system, passive recirculation, helium bubbling, recirculation lines, overboard bleed, feedlines, feed system |
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| CASI Document ID Number: | 95N24558 |
| Subjects: | Chemistry and Materials: Propellants and Fuels: Liquid Propellants |
| ID Code: | 257 |
| Deposited On: | 26 June 2002 |