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Experimental study on the effect of rocket nozzle wall materials on the stability of methane / Experimentell studie av effekten av raketmunstycksväggmaterial på stabiliteten av metanL. Holmboe, Thomas January 2023 (has links)
There has recently been an increased interest in methane as a rocket propellant due to its physical properties as well as the possibility of in-situ resource utilization in places like Mars. As part of ESA’s Future Launcher Preparatory Program, KTH in cooperation with GKN Aerospace has started the MERiT program, which seeks to study the characteristics of methane under conditions found in rocket nozzle cooling channels. In particular, the current work examines the influence of different wall temperatures, fluid flow rates, and fluid residence times on methane pyrolysis due to the catalytic properties of nickel based metals. Pyrolysis is the thermo-catalytic decomposition of methane, which results in the creation of hydrogen and solid carbon in the cooling channels. This can affect the performance of the rocket engine, the cooling channels, as well as the lifespan of the engine, which makes the process important to quantify when designing highly reusable engines. A chemical kinetics computer model has been developed, which has been used to quantify the most important parameters for methane pyrolysis. Based on these results, a small-scale pyrolysis experimental setup has been developed and used to characterise methane pyrolysis for different material temperatures and gas flow rates. The experimental setup has been proven to work and consistently provide pyrolysis at temperatures between 600 ◦C to 700 ◦C, although more work on the data collection side, in particular with regards to a gas chromatograph and a scanning electron microscope, is required to quantify and compare different experiments.
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Effect of microwave radiation on Fe/ZSM-5 for catalytic conversion of methanol to hydrocarbons (MTH)Ntelane, Tau Silvester 03 1900 (has links)
The effect of microwave radiation on the prepared 0.5Fe/ZSM-5 catalysts as a post-synthesis modification step was studied in the methanol-to-hydrocarbons process using the temperature-programmed surface reaction (TPSR) technique. This was achieved by preparing a series of 0.5Fe/ZSM-5 based catalysts under varying microwave power levels (0–700 W) and over a 10 s period, after iron impregnating the HZSM-5 zeolite (Si/Al = 30 and 80). Physicochemical properties were determined by XRD, SEM, BET, FT-IR, C3H9N-TPSR, and TGA techniques. It was found that microwave radiation induced few changes in the bulk properties of the 0.5Fe/ZSM-5 catalysts, but their surface and catalytic behavior were distinctly changed. Microwave radiation enhanced crystallinity and mesoporous growth, decreased coke and methane formation, decreased the concentration of Brønsted acidic sites, and decreased surface area and micropore volume as the microwave power level was increased from 0 to 700 W. From the TPSR profiles, it was observed that microwave radiation affects the peak intensities of the produced hydrocarbons. Application of microwave radiation shifted the desorption temperatures of the MTH process products over the HZSM-5(30) and HZSM-5(80) based catalysts to lower and higher values respectively. The MeOH-TPSR profiles showed that methanol was converted to DME and subsequently converted to aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons. It is reasonable to suggest that microwave radiation would be an essential post-synthesis modification step to mitigate coke formation and methane formation and increase catalyst activity and selectivity. / Chemical Engineering / M. Tech. (Chemical Engineering)
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