140 likes | 249 Views
Aersp 401A Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem. (rocket science in 15 minutes). Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem. Uses of onboard propulsion systems Orbit Transfer LEO to GEO LEO to Solar Orbit Drag Makeup Attitude Control Orbit Maintenance. Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem.
E N D
Aersp 401ASpacecraft Propulsion Subsystem (rocket science in 15 minutes)
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Uses of onboard propulsion systems • Orbit Transfer • LEO to GEO • LEO to Solar Orbit • Drag Makeup • Attitude Control • Orbit Maintenance
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Typical Mission Requirements • Orbit Transfer • Perigee Burn -- 2,400 m/s • Apogee Burn -- 1,500 - 1,800 m/s • Drag Makeup -- 60 - 1,500 m/s • Attitude Control -- 3 - 10% of total propellant • Orbit Maintenance • Orbit Correction -- 15 - 75 m/s (per year) • Stationkeeping -- 50 - 60 m/s
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Basics of Rocketry • Rocket -- Any propulsion system that carries its own reaction mass. • Δv = ueln(Minitial/Mfinal) • Δv is the spacecraft velocity change • ue is the rocket exhaust velocity • Minitial and Mfinal are the spacecraft mass before and after the rocket firing, respectively
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Basics of Rocketry • τ = (Δm/Δt)ue +(pe-pa)Ae • τ is the engine thrust • (Δm/Δt) is the mass flow rate of propellant • ue is the rocket exhaust velocity • pe and pa are the exhaust and ambient pressure, respectively • Ae is the nozzle exit area • Most thrust for a “perfectly expanded” nozzle
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Basics of Rocketry • ueq = ue + [(pe-pa)/(Δm/Δt)]Ae • ueq is the “equivalent exhaust velocity” • ueq = ue for a perfectly expanded nozzle • τ = (Δm/Δt)ueq • Isp = ueq/g • Specific impulse is a measure of thrust per propellant mass flow rate • g is always gravity at Earth’s surface, not local
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Chemical Rockets • Performance is energy limited • Propellant Selection • Maximum Performance • Density • Storage (i.e. cryogenic) • Heat transfer properties • Toxicity and corrosivity • Viscosity • Availability (cost)
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Chemical Rockets • Cold Gas Systems • pressurized gas flowing through a nozzle, no reaction • very low performance -- 30-70s Isp • very simple, inexpensive system • Monopropellant Liquid Systems • Single substance with a catalyst – hydrazine, hydrogen peroxide with metal catalysts -- silver, rhodium, platinum • physically simple system • 200-225s Isp
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Chemical Rockets • Bipropellant Liquid Systems • liquid fuel -- hydrocarbons, kerosene or alcohol based • liquid oxidizer -- oxygen, nitrogen tetroxide • more complex pumping/feed systems • better performance -- 300-450s Isp • Solid Propellants • Matrix of fuel and oxidizer • simple system • single burn, no throttling • moderate performance 275s Isp
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Electric Propulsion • Performance • Input Power = τIspg/(2η) • η is efficiency (Kinetic Energy/Input Power) • Electrothermal • Electrical energy is used to heat the propellant to high temperature, and then gas is expanded through a nozzle. • Resistojet • Ammonia, Water • ~300s Isp
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Electric Propulsion • Electrothermal (cont.) • Arcjet • Ammonia, Hydrazine • ~500-600s Isp • Electrostatic • Electrical energy is used to accelerate charged particles with a static electric field • Ion Engine • Xenon, Krypton • 2,500-10,000s Isp
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • Electric Propulsion • Electromagnetic • Combination of steady or transient electric and magnetic fields used to accelerate charged particles • Pulsed plasma thruster • Teflon • 850-1200s Isp
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • System Selection and Sizing (Table 17.2) 1) Determine propulsion functions -- table 17.1 2) Determine Δv and thrust levels needed -- sec. 7.3, sec. 10.3 3) Determine subsystem options -- ch. 17 4) Estimate Isp, thrust, mass, volume for each option 5) Establish baseline subsystem
Spacecraft Propulsion Subsystem • References • Hill and Peterson, Mechanics and Thermodynamics of Propulsion • Sutton, Rocket Propulsion Elements • Micci and Ketsdever, eds., Micropropulsion for Small Spacecraft. • Aersp 430, 530