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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Numerical study of the effect of the fuel film on heat transfer in a rocket engine combustion chamber /

Goh, Sing Huat. January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Engineering Science (Mechanical Engineering))--Naval Postgraduate School, December 2003. / Thesis advisor(s): Ashok Gopinath, Christopher Brophy. Includes bibliographical references (p. 71-72). Also available online.
2

A theoretical study of nonlinear longitudinal combustion instability in liquid propellant rocket engines

Lores, Manuel Edward 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
3

Numerical solution of axial-mode instability problems in solid propellant rocket motors

Kooker, Douglas Edward 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
4

Investigation of the flow turning loss in unstable solid propellant rocket motors

Matta, Lawrence Mark 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
5

Development of a hybrid sounding rocket motor.

Bernard, Geneviève. January 2013 (has links)
This work describes the development of a hybrid rocket propulsion system for a reusable sounding rocket, as part of the first phase of the UKZN Phoenix Hybrid Sounding Rocket Programme. The programme objective is to produce a series of low-to-medium altitude sounding rockets to cater for the needs of the African scientific community and local universities, starting with the 10 km apogee Phoenix-1A vehicle. In particular, this dissertation details the development of the Hybrid Rocket Performance Code (HRPC) together with the design, manufacture and testing of Phoenix-1A’s propulsion system. The Phoenix-1A hybrid propulsion system, generally referred to as the hybrid rocket motor (HRM), utilises SASOL 0907 paraffin wax and nitrous oxide as the solid fuel and liquid oxidiser, respectively. The HRPC software tool is based upon a one-dimensional, unsteady flow mathematical model, and is capable of analysing the combustion of a number of propellant combinations to predict overall hybrid rocket motor performance. The code is based on a two-phase (liquid oxidiser and solid fuel) numerical solution and was programmed in MATLAB. HRPC links with the NASA-CEA equilibrium chemistry programme to determine the thermodynamic properties of the combustion products necessary for solving the governing ordinary differential equations, which are derived from first principle gas dynamics. The combustion modelling is coupled to a nitrous oxide tank pressurization and blowdown model obtained from literature to provide a realistic decay in motor performance with burn time. HRPC has been validated against experimental data obtained during hot-fire testing of a laboratory-scale hybrid rocket motor, in addition to predictions made by reported performance modelling data. Development of the Phoenix-1A propulsion system consisted of the manufacture of the solid fuel grain and incorporated finite element and computational fluid dynamics analyses of various components of the system. A novel casting method for the fabrication of the system’s cylindrical single-port paraffin fuel grain is described. Detailed finite element analyses were performed on the combustion chamber casing, injector bulkhead and nozzle retainer to verify structural integrity under worst case loading conditions. In addition, thermal and pressure loading distributions on the motor’s nozzle and its subsequent response were estimated by conducting fluid-structure interaction analyses. A targeted total impulse of 75 kNs for the Phoenix-1A motor was obtained through iterative implementation of the HRPC application. This yielded an optimised propulsion system configuration and motor thrust curve. / Thesis (M.Sc.Eng.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2013.
6

Large-eddy simulations of high-pressure shear coaxial flows relevant for H2/O2 rocket engines

Masquelet, Matthieu Marc 11 January 2013 (has links)
The understanding and prediction of transient phenomena inside Liquid Rocket Engines (LREs) have been very difficult because of the many challenges posed by the conditions inside the combustion chamber. This is especially true for injectors involving liquid oxygen LOX and gaseous hydrogen GH₂. A wide range of length scales needs to be captured from high-pressure flame thicknesses of a few microns to the length of the chamber of the order of a meter. A wide range of time scales needs to be captured, again from the very small timescales involved in hydrogen chemistry to low-frequency longitudinal acoustics in the chamber. A wide range of densities needs to be captured, from the cryogenic liquid oxygen to the very hot and light combustion products. A wide range of flow speeds needs to be captured, from the incompressible liquid oxygen jet to the supersonic nozzle. Whether one desires to study these issues numerically or experimentally, they combine to make simulations and measurements very difficult whereas reliable and accurate data are required to understand the complex physics at stake. This thesis focuses on the numerical simulations of flows relevant to LRE applications using Large Eddy Simulations (LES). It identifies the required features to tackle such complex flows, implements and develops state-of-the-art solutions and apply them to a variety of increasingly difficult problems. More precisely, a multi-species real gas framework is developed inside a conservative, compressible solver that uses a state-of-the-art hybrid scheme to capture at the same time the large density gradients and the turbulent structures that can be found in a high-pressure liquid rocket engine. Particular care is applied to the implementation of the real gas framework with detailed derivations of thermodynamic properties, a modular implementation of select equations of state in the solver. and a new efficient iterative method. Several verification cases are performed to evaluate this implementation and the conservative properties of the solver. It is then validated against laboratory-scaled flows relevant to rocket engines, from a gas-gas reacting injector to a liquid-gas injector under non-reacting and reacting conditions. All the injectors considered contain a single shear coaxial element and the reacting cases only deal with H₂-O₂ systems. A gaseous oyxgen-gaseous hydrogen (GOX-GH₂) shear coaxial injector, typical of a staged combustion engine, is first investigated. Available experimental data is limited to the wall heat flux but extensive comparisons are conducted between three-dimensional and axisymmetric solutions generated by this solver as well as by other state-of-the-art solvers through a NASA validation campaign. It is found that the unsteady and three-dimensional character of LES is critical in capturing physical flow features, even on a relatively coarse grid and using a 7-step mechanism instead of a 21-step mechanism. The predictions of the wall heat flux, the only available data, are not very good and highlight the importance of grid resolution and near-wall models for LES. To perform more quantitative comparisons, a new experimental setup is investigated under both non-reacting and reacting conditions. The main difference with the previous setup, and in fact with most of the other laboratory rigs from the literature, is the presence of a strong co-flow to mimic the surrounding flow of other injecting elements. For the non-reacting case, agreement with the experimental high-speed visualization is very good, both qualitatively and quantitatively but for the reacting case, only poor agreement is obtained, with the numerical flame significantly shorter than the observed one. In both cases, the role of the co-flow and inlet conditions are investigated and highlighted. A validated LES solver should be able to go beyond some experimental constraints and help define the next direction of investigation. For the non-reacting case, a new scaling law is suggested after a review of the existing literature and a new numerical experiment agrees with the prediction of this scaling law. A slightly modified version of this non-reacting setup is also used to investigate and validate the Linear-Eddy Model (LEM), an advanced sub-grid closure model, in real gas flows for the first time. Finally, the structure of the trans-critical flame observed in the reacting case hints at the need for such more advanced turbulent combustion model for this class of flow.

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