Rocket Main Tank: Difference between revisions
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=Rocket Fuel tanks= | =Rocket Fuel tanks= | ||
In modern launchers, two tanks are used, one for fuel and one for the oxidizer, but it has not always been the case. The | [[Image:Restone_tank.jpg|right|320px]] | ||
In modern launchers, two tanks are used, one for fuel and one for the oxidizer, but it has not always been the case. The Redstone rocket for example used a single tank with an internal separation, as we can see below. The sphere is the most lightweight volume (volume / area is minimized), but we can't have rockets as large as they are long, so cylinders with hemispheric caps are used. Having a single tank cut in two like for the Restone is efficient mass-wise and volume-wise but can bring new issues for insulation in case of a single cryogenic fluid (funny enough, that was the case for the Restone which used LOX and ethanol). The thicker insulation may overtake the mass benefits of a single tank. | |||
==Sloshing and other effects== | ==Sloshing and other effects== | ||
Special care must be taken to avoid sloshing and vortexes in the tanks, that may lead to bubbles in propellant flow. | Special care must be taken to avoid sloshing and vortexes in the tanks, that may lead to bubbles in propellant flow. | ||
==Wall thickness and material== | |||
Tank material first has to be stable with what's inside. Lists are available for cryogenic liquids at least. Besides this basic filter, the material choice mostly depends on money and on what's available on the market. For pressurized tanks, we will use 6061 aluminium or steel. | |||
The thickness of the tank walls obviously depend on the internal pressure, but also on the diameter of the tank. See [http://www.innovatia.com/Design_Center/FundRoc_4-8.htm]. For example, aluminium walls can be 2mm thick and 0.4m wide for a pressure up to 13 bar with no safety factor. For a 0.2m wide tank, the thickness can be 1mm for the same pressure, or twice the pressure for the same thickness. | |||
==Cryogenic fuel tanks== | |||
Cryogenic and also low boiling temperature liquids like nitrous oxide are persistently evaporating at ambient temperature. It's like having water at 100°C and providing always more heat to it. | |||
When the vapour pressure is high enough, and when tanks are solid enough too, the evaporation can reach [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaporation#Evaporative_equilibrium equilibrium] and the tank can contain a stable mix of liquid and gas at high pressure. This is the case for nitrous oxide at temperatures below 36.4°C, its critical temperature above which it turns all into gas, no matter what pressure is used. The issue then becomes the density of the mixture, which drops greatly. | |||
For [[LOX]], the critical temperature is -118.59°C, and the critical pressure is 50.43 bar. There's no point in keeping it so much pressurized because it could just boil off at this temperature. Since the phase change occurs at a constant temperature, we can as well choose a temperature and a pressure at which the LOX density is high enough, but that's a trade-off with the evaporation rate. Since the temperature difference between inside and outside the tank is greater, even more heat is transferred to the LOX, and more evaporation is created. Tank insulation is then required to avoid venting all the propellant before actually using it (balloon or aircraft launch can take some time to get to the launch altitude). | |||
===Calculating evaporation rate=== | |||
''Main page: [[Heat transfer]]'' | |||
In the case of balloon or aircraft launches, the rocket stays filled with cryogenic fluids for a quite long time before being fired, with no possibility for refuelling. First on the ground after tank filling, during the final pre-flight verifications, then during the ascent to the rocket ignition altitude. The vehicle passes through different air layers with different temperatures and densities. A simple [[Flight_at_high_altitude#Gas_properties_and_altitude|atmospheric model]] has been made (see [[File:ISA_atmospheric_model.c]]) and is used in order to calculate the heat transferred to the vehicle during the ascent, which is dominant over the heat transferred during the powered flight of the rocket. The ascent rate is approximated, as constant between some gross altitude levels. | |||
The evaporation rate can be calculated easily once the amount of heat provided by the surrounding air is known, using the heat of vaporization ΔH<sub>vap</sub> of the propellant, the insulation layer's U-value, temperatures and so on. The issue is that the amount of heat provided by air is very hard to calculate. It should be done using CFD, but can be approximated in some conditions. The convection heat transfer coefficient ''h'' is the key concern. See the [[heat transfer]] page for more information and '''results''' for the LOX tank given by the first rocket mass [[Rocket:First_approximations#Our_first_approximation|approximation]]. | |||
===Thermal insulation materials=== | |||
Cryogenic fuel tanks benefit from being insulated, which limits vaporization or even prevents boiling. | |||
A list of thermal conductivities is available on [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_thermal_conductivities Wikipedia]. PU foam is a simple solution, it can be sprayed at the desired thickness but may be hard to spray in very thin layers. Aerogel is the best existing insulation material and it has been used by Armadillo Aerospace (see [[Rocket_Main_Tank#Resources|below]]). Aerogel for cryogenic applications is [http://www.aerogel.com/products/overview-product.html currently available] in 5mm or 10mm thick sheets. | |||
{| border="1" class="wikitable" | |||
!Material | |||
!''k'' (mW/m.K) | |||
!density (kg/m<sup>3</sup>) | |||
!availability,comments | |||
|- | |||
|Aerogel | |||
|15 | |||
|13 | |||
|readily available in sheets, cheap | |||
|- | |||
|PU foam | |||
|22 | |||
|a density of 24 to 32 (1.5 to 2 LB/cu.ft) should be enough | |||
|readily available, cheap, sprayed | |||
|- | |||
|Expanded polystyrene | |||
|32 to 38 | |||
|40 to 15 (resp.) | |||
|readily available in boards, cheap | |||
|- | |||
|cotton | |||
|around 30 | |||
| | |||
|readily available, cheap | |||
|- | |||
|mineral insulation | |||
|around 40 | |||
| | |||
|readily available, cheap | |||
|- | |||
|neoprene | |||
|54 | |||
|960 | |||
|readily available, cheap, heavy | |||
|} | |||
A more precise list of low conductivity materials is available [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_insulation_material here]. | |||
==Propellant lines== | |||
Pumps and | |||
Engine fuel supply pipe and valve, tank pressure sensor, fill and drain pipes and valves. | |||
For a cryogenic fuel or a high vapour pressure fuel tank: pressure relief valve, venting valve. | |||
==Resources== | |||
Armadillo Aerospace has [http://www.armadilloaerospace.com/n.x/Armadillo/Home/News?news_id=333 documented] their LOX tank insulation: | |||
We settled on using Pyrogel insulating blankets from Aspen Aerogels to insulate our tanks: [http://www.aerogel.com/products/pdf/Pyrogel_6250_DS.pdf#search=%22pyrogel%20insulation%22] | |||
After Phil figured out the right pattern to make the gores for the spherical tanks, it went very well. | |||
We used a spray adhesive to attach it, and we tested all the combinations of dusty side / non-dusty side | |||
and painted / non-painted for best adhesion. Surprisingly, putting the adhesive on the dusty side worked | |||
best. The material still does shed some dust in the wind, but it is reasonably rugged, more so than the | |||
fastblock insulation we were previously using, and it is only about $5 / square foot, which is a tenth | |||
the cost of the fastblock. It also sheds water fairly well. | |||
I was a bit surprised at how much of a difference insulating the tank made on our boiloff rates. I had | |||
been presuming that much of the boiloff was due to heat conduction from the rest of the 90 pound tanks | |||
that don’t get cooled that well during filling, but it turns out that the entire tanks get cooled a lot | |||
better with insulation. We used to have 10 psi in the tanks after filling, even with the vents open, but | |||
now it is just 3 psi and soon drops to 1 psi. We also insulated our test stand tank. | |||
http://media.armadilloaerospace.com/2006_08_12/insulating.jpg | |||
XCOR uses Styrofoam, a type of polystyrene with a 33 mW/m.K thermal conductivity, to insulate their aluminium LOX tanks. | |||
[[Category:Rocket|Tank]] |
Latest revision as of 01:13, 29 December 2012
Rocket Fuel tanks
In modern launchers, two tanks are used, one for fuel and one for the oxidizer, but it has not always been the case. The Redstone rocket for example used a single tank with an internal separation, as we can see below. The sphere is the most lightweight volume (volume / area is minimized), but we can't have rockets as large as they are long, so cylinders with hemispheric caps are used. Having a single tank cut in two like for the Restone is efficient mass-wise and volume-wise but can bring new issues for insulation in case of a single cryogenic fluid (funny enough, that was the case for the Restone which used LOX and ethanol). The thicker insulation may overtake the mass benefits of a single tank.
Sloshing and other effects
Special care must be taken to avoid sloshing and vortexes in the tanks, that may lead to bubbles in propellant flow.
Wall thickness and material
Tank material first has to be stable with what's inside. Lists are available for cryogenic liquids at least. Besides this basic filter, the material choice mostly depends on money and on what's available on the market. For pressurized tanks, we will use 6061 aluminium or steel.
The thickness of the tank walls obviously depend on the internal pressure, but also on the diameter of the tank. See [1]. For example, aluminium walls can be 2mm thick and 0.4m wide for a pressure up to 13 bar with no safety factor. For a 0.2m wide tank, the thickness can be 1mm for the same pressure, or twice the pressure for the same thickness.
Cryogenic fuel tanks
Cryogenic and also low boiling temperature liquids like nitrous oxide are persistently evaporating at ambient temperature. It's like having water at 100°C and providing always more heat to it.
When the vapour pressure is high enough, and when tanks are solid enough too, the evaporation can reach equilibrium and the tank can contain a stable mix of liquid and gas at high pressure. This is the case for nitrous oxide at temperatures below 36.4°C, its critical temperature above which it turns all into gas, no matter what pressure is used. The issue then becomes the density of the mixture, which drops greatly.
For LOX, the critical temperature is -118.59°C, and the critical pressure is 50.43 bar. There's no point in keeping it so much pressurized because it could just boil off at this temperature. Since the phase change occurs at a constant temperature, we can as well choose a temperature and a pressure at which the LOX density is high enough, but that's a trade-off with the evaporation rate. Since the temperature difference between inside and outside the tank is greater, even more heat is transferred to the LOX, and more evaporation is created. Tank insulation is then required to avoid venting all the propellant before actually using it (balloon or aircraft launch can take some time to get to the launch altitude).
Calculating evaporation rate
Main page: Heat transfer
In the case of balloon or aircraft launches, the rocket stays filled with cryogenic fluids for a quite long time before being fired, with no possibility for refuelling. First on the ground after tank filling, during the final pre-flight verifications, then during the ascent to the rocket ignition altitude. The vehicle passes through different air layers with different temperatures and densities. A simple atmospheric model has been made (see File:ISA atmospheric model.c) and is used in order to calculate the heat transferred to the vehicle during the ascent, which is dominant over the heat transferred during the powered flight of the rocket. The ascent rate is approximated, as constant between some gross altitude levels.
The evaporation rate can be calculated easily once the amount of heat provided by the surrounding air is known, using the heat of vaporization ΔHvap of the propellant, the insulation layer's U-value, temperatures and so on. The issue is that the amount of heat provided by air is very hard to calculate. It should be done using CFD, but can be approximated in some conditions. The convection heat transfer coefficient h is the key concern. See the heat transfer page for more information and results for the LOX tank given by the first rocket mass approximation.
Thermal insulation materials
Cryogenic fuel tanks benefit from being insulated, which limits vaporization or even prevents boiling.
A list of thermal conductivities is available on Wikipedia. PU foam is a simple solution, it can be sprayed at the desired thickness but may be hard to spray in very thin layers. Aerogel is the best existing insulation material and it has been used by Armadillo Aerospace (see below). Aerogel for cryogenic applications is currently available in 5mm or 10mm thick sheets.
Material | k (mW/m.K) | density (kg/m3) | availability,comments |
---|---|---|---|
Aerogel | 15 | 13 | readily available in sheets, cheap |
PU foam | 22 | a density of 24 to 32 (1.5 to 2 LB/cu.ft) should be enough | readily available, cheap, sprayed |
Expanded polystyrene | 32 to 38 | 40 to 15 (resp.) | readily available in boards, cheap |
cotton | around 30 | readily available, cheap | |
mineral insulation | around 40 | readily available, cheap | |
neoprene | 54 | 960 | readily available, cheap, heavy |
A more precise list of low conductivity materials is available here.
Propellant lines
Pumps and Engine fuel supply pipe and valve, tank pressure sensor, fill and drain pipes and valves.
For a cryogenic fuel or a high vapour pressure fuel tank: pressure relief valve, venting valve.
Resources
Armadillo Aerospace has documented their LOX tank insulation:
We settled on using Pyrogel insulating blankets from Aspen Aerogels to insulate our tanks: [2] After Phil figured out the right pattern to make the gores for the spherical tanks, it went very well. We used a spray adhesive to attach it, and we tested all the combinations of dusty side / non-dusty side and painted / non-painted for best adhesion. Surprisingly, putting the adhesive on the dusty side worked best. The material still does shed some dust in the wind, but it is reasonably rugged, more so than the fastblock insulation we were previously using, and it is only about $5 / square foot, which is a tenth the cost of the fastblock. It also sheds water fairly well. I was a bit surprised at how much of a difference insulating the tank made on our boiloff rates. I had been presuming that much of the boiloff was due to heat conduction from the rest of the 90 pound tanks that don’t get cooled that well during filling, but it turns out that the entire tanks get cooled a lot better with insulation. We used to have 10 psi in the tanks after filling, even with the vents open, but now it is just 3 psi and soon drops to 1 psi. We also insulated our test stand tank. http://media.armadilloaerospace.com/2006_08_12/insulating.jpg
XCOR uses Styrofoam, a type of polystyrene with a 33 mW/m.K thermal conductivity, to insulate their aluminium LOX tanks.