eurekalert | A University of Central Florida researcher and his team have
developed an advanced new rocket-propulsion system once thought to be
impossible.
The system, known as a rotating detonation rocket engine, will allow
upper stage rockets for space missions to become lighter, travel
farther, and burn more cleanly.
The result were published this month in the journal Combustion and Flame.
"The study presents, for the first time, experimental evidence of a
safe and functioning hydrogen and oxygen propellant detonation in a
rotating detonation rocket engine," said Kareem Ahmed, an assistant
professor in UCF's Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
who led the research.
The rotating detonations are continuous, Mach 5 explosions that
rotate around the inside of a rocket engine, and the explosions are
sustained by feeding hydrogen and oxygen propellant into the system at
just the right amounts.
This system improves rocket-engine efficiency so that more power is
generated while using less fuel than traditional rocket energies, thus
lightening the rocket's load and reducing its costs and emissions.
Mach 5 explosions create bursts of energy that travel 4,500 to 5,600
miles per hour, which is more than five times the speed of sound. They
are contained within a durable engine body constructed of copper and
brass.
The technology has been studied since the 1960s but had not been
successful due to the chemical propellants used or the ways they were
mixed.
Ahmed's group made it work by carefully balancing the rate of the propellants, hydrogen and oxygen, released into the engine.
"We have to tune the sizes of the jets releasing the propellants to
enhance the mixing for a local hydrogen-oxygen mixture," Ahmed said.
"So, when the rotating explosion comes by for this fresh mixture, it's
still sustained. Because if you have your composition mixture slightly
off, it will tend to deflagrate, or burn slowly instead of detonating."
Ahmed's team also had to capture evidence of their finding.
They did this by injecting a tracer in the hydrogen fuel flow and quantifying the detonation waves using a high-speed camera.
"You need the tracer to actually see that explosion that is
happening inside and track its motion," he said. "Developing this method
to characterize the detonation wave dynamics is another contribution of
this article."
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