Marshall Technical Reports Server

Laser Transmission Measurements of Soot Extinction Coefficients in the Exhaust Plume of the X-34 60k-lb Thrust Fastrac Rocket Engine

NASA/TP-210075, Dobson, C.C. and Eskridge, R.H. and Lee, M.H., Laser Transmission Measurements of Soot Extinction Coefficients in the Exhaust Plume of the X-34 60k-lb Thrust Fastrac Rocket Engine, Propulsion Research Center, Space Transportation Directorate, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, March 2000, pp. 36, Format(s): PDF 1669k

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A four-channel laser transmissometer has been used to probe the soot content of the exhaust plume of the X-34 60k-lb thrust Fastrac rocket engine at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. The transmission measurements were made at an axial location approximately 1.65 nozzle diameters from the exit plane and are interpreted in terms of homogeneous radial zones to yield extinction coefficients from 0.5-8.4 per meter. The corresponding soot mass density, spatially averaged over the plume cross section, is, for Rayleigh particles, approximately 0.7 microgram cm(10x-3), and alternative particle distributions are briefly considered. Absolute plume radiance at the laser wavelength (515 nm)is estimated from the data at approximately 2,200 K equivalent blackbody temperature, and temporal correlations in emission from several spatial locations are noted
Keywords:rocket engine, soot, laser, transmission, extinction
Subjects:Astronautics: Spacecraft Propulsion And Power
ID Code:519
Deposited On:30 July 2002