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Modeling Fuel Droplets in RCS Engine Exhaust Plume

Authors :
Camila Belen Cabrera
Jonathan S. Pitt
Source :
Modeling Fuel Droplets in RCS Engine Exhaust Plume.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2023.

Abstract

Thrusters are used to maneuver spacecraft in space. Spacecraft maneuvering and attitude control is achieved by accelerating the high temperature and pressure exhaust gases, which are the result of chemical combustion in the case of chemical engines, through the rocket nozzle. Following the end of the nozzle a plume is created containing combustion gases and high velocity droplets of unburnt propellant that with time can erode the surfaces it strikes. A simulation that can accurately model a thruster’s plume can help us reduce the erosion of components struck by the plume. The creation of this simulation can be broken into several parts, and this paper focuses on finding out what distribution of particles along a plane in the nozzle, where combustion can be assumed to be complete, creates the observed particle distribution in the plume. Findings show that unburnt droplets are mostly concentrated in the center of the nozzle or uniformly dispersed within the nozzle.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Modeling Fuel Droplets in RCS Engine Exhaust Plume
Notes :
80KSC020R0052
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20230010007
Document Type :
Report