sugarshot
Electrical
- May 26, 2006
- 24
Some folks I'm working with on a hobby project could use some insights into addressing an experimental motor casing overheating problem.
It's a low energy solid fuel core-burning motor;
Say you have a long-ish motor casing with the usual bulkhead and nozzle. This casing has a midjoint, which is also a convergence-divergence zone. The fuel is located in the top half. The bottom half functions as a chamber.
The problem is midway up the lower half, there is a rapid heating effect (heat appears to accumulate more rapidly here, by measurement). On the test stand, the lower half splits open during the burn.
We don't want to approach the problem just by making the tube thicker or by using titanium.
So then, at considerable pressures and heating, how do we
reduce the heating effect and eliminate bursting? Between us, we have offered the following guesses;
1) This heating effect is mostly due to conductive thermal gains from the hot gases to the tube, and could be
addressed by adding a thin liner, and maybe use more resistive metal in the casing. The liner would be ceramic fiber with generous epoxy binder.
2) This heating effect is mostly due to thermal gains by thermal radiation from the gases to the tube, and could be addressed by changing the emissivity of the tube surface, and diffusivity of the tube metal. (my guess)
3) This heating effect is mostly due to the effect of
the convergence-divergence zone at the mid-joint. The shape of this 'shaped restrictor', results in gases interacting with the tube at steep angles, creating frictional overheating of the tube.
Again, the question is ultimately how to avoid casing rupture without increasing thickness. The next test casing will be with 4130 steel. The first two casings were standard electrical tubing. Someone suggested a fiberglass and thermoset polymer casing, which sounds unusual to me.
Ideas ?
It's a low energy solid fuel core-burning motor;
Say you have a long-ish motor casing with the usual bulkhead and nozzle. This casing has a midjoint, which is also a convergence-divergence zone. The fuel is located in the top half. The bottom half functions as a chamber.
The problem is midway up the lower half, there is a rapid heating effect (heat appears to accumulate more rapidly here, by measurement). On the test stand, the lower half splits open during the burn.
We don't want to approach the problem just by making the tube thicker or by using titanium.
So then, at considerable pressures and heating, how do we
reduce the heating effect and eliminate bursting? Between us, we have offered the following guesses;
1) This heating effect is mostly due to conductive thermal gains from the hot gases to the tube, and could be
addressed by adding a thin liner, and maybe use more resistive metal in the casing. The liner would be ceramic fiber with generous epoxy binder.
2) This heating effect is mostly due to thermal gains by thermal radiation from the gases to the tube, and could be addressed by changing the emissivity of the tube surface, and diffusivity of the tube metal. (my guess)
3) This heating effect is mostly due to the effect of
the convergence-divergence zone at the mid-joint. The shape of this 'shaped restrictor', results in gases interacting with the tube at steep angles, creating frictional overheating of the tube.
Again, the question is ultimately how to avoid casing rupture without increasing thickness. The next test casing will be with 4130 steel. The first two casings were standard electrical tubing. Someone suggested a fiberglass and thermoset polymer casing, which sounds unusual to me.
Ideas ?