Experimental validation of rotating detonation for rocket propulsion

Author:

Bennewitz John W.,Burr Jason R.,Bigler Blaine R.,Burke Robert F.,Lemcherfi Aaron,Mundt Tyler,Rezzag Taha,Plaehn Ethan W.,Sosa Jonathan,Walters Ian V.,Schumaker S. Alexander,Ahmed Kareem A.,Slabaugh Carson D.,Knowlen Carl,Hargus William A.

Abstract

AbstractSpace travel requires high-powered, efficient rocket propulsion systems for controllable launch vehicles and safe planetary entry. Interplanetary travel will rely on energy-dense propellants to produce thrust via combustion as the heat generation process to convert chemical to thermal energy. In propulsion devices, combustion can occur through deflagration or detonation, each having vastly different characteristics. Deflagration is subsonic burning at effectively constant pressure and is the main means of thermal energy generation in modern rockets. Alternatively, detonation is a supersonic combustion-driven shock offering several advantages. Detonations entail compact heat release zones at elevated local pressure and temperature. Specifically, rotating detonation rocket engines (RDREs) use detonation as the primary means of energy conversion, producing more useful available work compared to equivalent deflagration-based devices; detonation-based combustion is poised to radically improve rocket performance compared to today’s constant pressure engines, producing up to 10$$\%$$ % increased thrust. This new propulsion cycle will also reduce thruster size and/or weight, lower injection pressures, and are less susceptible to engine-damaging acoustic instabilities. Here we present a collective effort to benchmark performance and standardize operability of rotating detonation rocket engines to develop the RDRE technology readiness level towards a flight demonstration. Key detonation physics unique to RDREs, driving consistency and control of chamber dynamics across the engine operating envelope, are identified and addressed to drive down the variability and stochasticity observed in previous studies. This effort demonstrates an RDRE operating consistently across multiple facilities, validating this technology’s performance as the foundation of RDRE architecture for future aerospace applications.

Funder

Air Force Office of Scientific Research

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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