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Keywords = thrust chamber thermal control

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21 pages, 1759 KB  
Article
Design of a Modular Testing Facility for Sustainable Fuels Obtained from Plastic Waste Pyrolysis for Aerospace Engines
by Alexa-Andreea Crisan, Radu Eugen Kuncser, Simona-Nicoleta Danescu, Vlad Stefan Buzetelu, Madalina Botu and Daniel-Eugeniu Crunteanu
Inventions 2026, 11(2), 30; https://doi.org/10.3390/inventions11020030 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 807
Abstract
The transition toward sustainable aviation fuels requires dedicated experimental platforms capable of evaluating alternative fuels under realistic propulsion conditions. This study presents the development and laboratory experimental validation of a modular testing installation designed for sustainable fuels derived from plastic waste pyrolysis, intended [...] Read more.
The transition toward sustainable aviation fuels requires dedicated experimental platforms capable of evaluating alternative fuels under realistic propulsion conditions. This study presents the development and laboratory experimental validation of a modular testing installation designed for sustainable fuels derived from plastic waste pyrolysis, intended for aerospace engine applications. The proposed system is conceived as an integrated small-scale gas turbine assembly that reproduces the functional characteristics of a jet engine and enables controlled laboratory investigations of dynamic behavior, combustion stability, and performance. The installation comprises a compressor, annular combustion chamber, and turbine mounted on a common shaft, along with a fully autonomous fuel supply system equipped with electronically controlled pumping, safety devices, and thermal conditioning of the fuel mixture via an attached Stirling engine. Combustion processes are continuously evaluated using an exhaust gas analysis system to assess fuel composition and combustion quality, while a high-speed camera operating at 50,000 fps enables detailed visualization of flame stability. Operating parameters, including temperatures, pressures, rotational speed, mass flow rates, and thrust, are monitored and recorded through an integrated control and data acquisition system with real-time analysis capabilities. Experimental results demonstrate stable operation and reliable ignition using alternative fuel mixtures, confirming the suitability of the modular installation as a versatile research platform for the assessment and comparative analysis of sustainable aerospace fuels. Full article
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20 pages, 4559 KB  
Article
Turbopump Parametric Modelling and Reliability Assessment for Reusable Rocket Engine Applications
by Mateusz T. Gulczyński, Robson H. S. Hahn, Jan C. Deeken and Michael Oschwald
Aerospace 2024, 11(10), 808; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace11100808 - 2 Oct 2024
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 7517
Abstract
The development of modern reusable launchers, such as the Themis project with its LOX/LCH4 Prometheus engine, CALLISTO—a reusable VTVL-launcher first-stage demonstrator with a LOX/LH2 RSR2 engine, and SpaceX’s Falcon 9 with its Merlin 1D engine, underscores the need for advanced control algorithms to [...] Read more.
The development of modern reusable launchers, such as the Themis project with its LOX/LCH4 Prometheus engine, CALLISTO—a reusable VTVL-launcher first-stage demonstrator with a LOX/LH2 RSR2 engine, and SpaceX’s Falcon 9 with its Merlin 1D engine, underscores the need for advanced control algorithms to ensure reliable engine operation. The multi-restart capability of these engines imposes additional requirements for throttling, necessitating an extended controller-validity domain to safely achieve low thrust levels across various operating regimes. This capability also increases the risk of component failure, especially as engine parameters evolve with mission profiles. To address this, our study evaluates the dynamic reliability of reusable rocket engines (RREs) and their subcomponents under different failure modes using multi-physics system-level modelling and simulation, with a particular focus on turbopump components. Transient condition modelling and performance analysis, conducted using EcosimPro-ESPSS software (version 6.4.34), revealed that turbopump components maintain high reliability under nominal conditions, with turbine blades demonstrating significant fatigue life even under varying thermal and mechanical loads. Additionally, the proposed predictive model estimates the remaining useful life of critical components, offering valuable insights for improving the longevity and reliability of turbopumps in reusable rocket engines. This study employs deterministic, thermally dependent structural simulations, with key control objectives including end-state tracking of combustion chamber pressure and mixture ratios and the verification of operational constraints, exemplified by the LUMEN demonstrator engine and the LE-5B-2 engine class. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Space Propulsion: Advances and Challenges (3rd Volume))
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28 pages, 5736 KB  
Article
Transcritical Behavior of Methane in the Cooling Jacket of a Liquid-Oxygen/Liquid-Methane Rocket-Engine Demonstrator
by Daniele Ricci, Francesco Battista and Manrico Fragiacomo
Energies 2022, 15(12), 4190; https://doi.org/10.3390/en15124190 - 7 Jun 2022
Cited by 19 | Viewed by 4996
Abstract
The successful design of a liquid rocket engine is strictly linked to the development of efficient cooling systems, able to dissipate huge thermal loads coming from the combustion in the thrust chamber. Generally, cooling architectures are based on regenerative strategies, adopting fuels as [...] Read more.
The successful design of a liquid rocket engine is strictly linked to the development of efficient cooling systems, able to dissipate huge thermal loads coming from the combustion in the thrust chamber. Generally, cooling architectures are based on regenerative strategies, adopting fuels as coolants; and on cooling jackets, including several narrow axial channels allocated around the thrust chambers. Moreover, since cryogenic fuels are used, as in the case of oxygen/methane-based liquid rocket engines, the refrigerant is injected in liquid phase at supercritical pressure conditions and heated by the thermal load coming from the combustion chamber, which tends to experience transcritical conditions until behaving as a supercritical vapor before exiting the cooling jacket. The comprehension of fluid behavior inside the cooling jackets of liquid-oxygen/methane rocket engines as a function of different operative conditions represents not only a current topic but a critical issue for the development of future propulsion systems. Hence, the current manuscript discusses the results concerning the cooling jacket equipping the liquid-oxygen/liquid-methane demonstrator, designed and manufactured within the scope of HYPROB-NEW Italian Project. In particular, numerical results considering the nominal operating conditions and the influence of variables, such as the inlet temperature and pressure values of refrigerant as well as mass-flow rate, are shown to discuss the fluid transcritical behavior inside the cooling channels and give indications on the numerical methodologies, supporting the design of liquid-oxygen/liquid-methane rocket-engine cooling systems. Validation has been accomplished by means of experimental results obtained through a specific test article, provided with a cooling channel, characterized by dimensions representative of HYPROB DEMO-0A regenerative combustion chamber. Full article
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