The present disclosure relates to rocket nozzles and their design and manufacture.
A rocket nozzle is used in a rocket engine to expand and accelerate combustion gases to exit the nozzle at hypersonic velocities. The rocket nozzle turns the static high pressure, high temperature gas into rapidly moving gas at near-ambient pressure.
Some rockets may also use ion energy instead of expanding gases from propellant burning. In such cases, ion guns instead of injectors are present in the nozzle. The ion guns generate a beam of heavy ions with a well-defined energy distribution. Others use nuclear energy in the form of a nuclear reactor instead of a combustion chamber in the nozzle that releases the energy of a nuclear reaction into the skirt of the nozzle.
The making the nozzle body and components lighter and stronger has led to work in making 3D printed nozzle parts by any number of 3D printing methods like selective laser melting (SLM), spark plasma sintering (SPS) and laser metal deposition (LMD).
It is naturally desirable to optimize design of rocket nozzles to improve propulsion, or to make them stronger and more aerodynamic as well as lighter. It may also be desirable to manipulate the shape, density and energy of the energy plume as it exits the nozzle at supersonic velocity.
A rocket nozzle is provided comprising at least a skirt section made from an optimized metal lattice structure, with a hardened material applied onto the metal lattice structure so as to coat the structure and fill voids in the lattice by chemical vapor deposition.
A rocket nozzle is further provided comprising one or more bypass lines for taking expanding gas from a combustion chamber of the rocket nozzle and redirecting the expanding gas to a skirt section of the rocket nozzle to thereby manipulate the shape of a plume of expanding gas exiting the rocket nozzle.
A rocket nozzle is also provided having an axis of symmetry and comprising a combustion chamber having a back plate oriented perpendicular to the axis of symmetry at one end, and narrowing to a throat at a second end; a skirt section extending from the throat; one or more main injectors extending orthogonally from the back plate into the combustion chamber for injecting fuel for combustion into the combustion chamber and one or more opposing injectors oriented to direct an opposing flow of energy and gas expansion towards a main flow of energy and gas expanding from the main injectors to serve for amplifying gas expansion in the combustion chamber.
A rocket nozzle is further taught, having an axis of symmetry and comprising a combustion chamber having a back plate oriented perpendicular to the axis of symmetry at one end, and narrowing to a throat at a second end, a skirt section extending from the throat, one or more main injectors extending orthogonally from the back plate into the combustion chamber for injecting fuel for combustion into the combustion chamber; and one or more secondary injectors arranged around the combustion chamber proximal the throat.
It is to be understood that other aspects of the present disclosure will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description, wherein various embodiments of the disclosure are shown and described by way of illustration. As will be realized, the disclosure is capable of other and different embodiments and its several details are capable of modification in various other respects, all without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure. Accordingly the drawings and detailed description are to be regarded as illustrative in nature and not as restrictive.
A further, detailed, description of the disclosure, briefly described above, will follow by reference to the following drawings of specific embodiments of the disclosure. The drawings depict only typical embodiments of the disclosure and are therefore not to be considered limiting of its scope. In the drawings:
The drawings are not necessarily to scale and in some instances proportions may have been exaggerated in order to more clearly depict certain features.
The description that follows and the embodiments described therein are provided by way of illustration of an example; or examples, of particular embodiments of the principles of various aspects of the present disclosure. These examples are provided for the purposes of explanation, and not of limitation, of those principles and of the disclosure in its various aspects.
The present disclosure relates to a dynamic rocket nozzle its design and construction.
With reference to the present figures, the present nozzle 100 comprises a combustion chamber section 2 and a skirt section 4, which are connected at a throat section 8. Running through the nozzle 100 is a central column 10 that n part carries fuel to power the thrust of the nozzle 100.
A back plate 12 covers one end of the combustion chamber section 2. One or more main injectors 14 extend through the back plate 12 and into the combustion chamber 2.
In the embodiment of
The orientation of the opposing injectors 18a, 18b in relation to the main injectors 14a,14b serve direct a counterflow of expanding gas and energy towards that flowing from the main injectors, to amplify the gas expansion and help increase specific impulse potential. They also serve to improve mixing and burning within the combustion chamber 2. The energy and fuel expansion flow are illustrated in
With reference to
In an alternative embodiment, depicted in
In typical rocket nozzles, the jet of fuel combustion/energy from the injectors travels down the combustion chamber 2 and through the throat 8, where the restricted cross-sectional area and volume result in increasing the pressure and force of the jet as it then enters the skirt section 4 and is released as a plume behind the rocket. Speed of the jet in the combustion chamber 2 is often at sub-sonic levels, whereas after the throat 8 the jet travels at supersonic speeds, thereby increasing thrust.
In one embodiment of the present rocket nozzle design, the plume shape, and therefore the thrust provided by the nozzle 100, is adjustable.
The present nozzle 100 provides one or more centre intakes 20 formed in the central column 10, near the throat 8 of the nozzle 100. These centre intakes 20 can be opened mechanically to receive the expanding gas in the combustion chamber 2 and direct it through a lower end of the central column 10, to be vented out of column perforations 22 formed at a lower end of the central column 10. The direction of the flow of this energy and expanding gas is illustrated in
In the embodiment of
In a preferred embodiment, the intakes 20/24 can take the form of a valve or of louvres.
When the rocket is at sea level the nozzle can expand the exhaust plume, as in
As well, the alternating of expanding and contracting the exhaust plume 30 can serve as an accelerator for the rocket.
While
With reference to
An alternate embodiment of the nozzle 100 of
In a further aspect of the present disclosure the body of the present rocket nozzle 100, including the combustion chamber 2, throat 8, skirt section 4, back plate 12 central column 10 and all injectors (14,18) and intakes (20,24) can be manufactured from a metal lattice structure, with a hard material applied thereto. The metal lattice structure in one embodiment can be 3D printed. Preferably the nozzle 100 is structurally optimized to in lattice geometry and design in terms of strength and/or stiffness-to-weight ratio. In one embodiment, the hard material can be applied to the metal lattice by chemical vapor deposition. In such case, the metal lattice serves as the cathode allowing the hard material to form around the metal structure and to fill the voids of the lattice matrix.
In a further preferred embodiment, the hard material can be diamond or synthetic diamond that is vapor deposited onto and throughout the metal lattice structure. The metal lattice framework has been found to provide some malleability and flexibility to the overall nozzle 100, to reduce rigidity which can result in structural failure.
In a further preferred embodiment, the metal lattice deposited with the hard metal can then be coated in materials such as rhenium or tungsten outer coating. The tungsten coating or rhenium coating prevents oxidation of the diamond.
In a further preferred embodiment, a silicon carbide can be used in the chemical vapor deposition process instead of diamond.
The nozzle 100 can then be polished or otherwise machined to smoothen the surfaces thereof. This form of manufacture provides a light, strong and heat resistant nozzle 100.
In an alternate embodiment, metal foam could also be used instead of an optimized metal lattice as a substitute in forming a frame onto and throughout which the diamond could be deposited.
The previous description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the present disclosure. Various modifications to those embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the disclosure. Thus, the present disclosure is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein, but is to be accorded the full scope consistent with the claims, wherein reference to an element in the singular, such as by use of the article “a” or “an” is not intended to mean “one and only one” unless specifically so stated, but rather “one or more”. All structural and functional equivalents to the elements of the various embodiments described throughout the disclosure that are known or later come to be known to those of ordinary skill in the art are intended to be encompassed by the elements of the claims. Moreover, nothing disclosed herein is intended to be dedicated to the public regardless of whether such disclosure is explicitly recited in the claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62925603 | Oct 2019 | US |