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First
firing of STERN rocket
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
STERN
Static
Test Expansion/Deflection Rocket Nozzle
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Credit:
University of Bristol
A team of engineers from
Bristol University has conducted the first firing of the STERN
rocket motor. Rocket engines equipped with the STERN (Static Test
Expansion/Deflection Rocket Nozzle) rocket motor should benefit
from increased performance in flight and achieving the firing
test is a major step forward in a long term program to understand
the way these more complex nozzles work.
The first firing of the STERN
rocket motor was conducted at 04:45 pm on Wednesday 19 March 2008
and was followed by a second firing an hour and half later. These
are the first hot firings of rocket motors fitted with an
Expansion Deflection (ED) nozzle in the UK and the first to use
hydrogen and air as propellants. First analysis of the test
results suggests that the motor performed as expected. More tests
are planned over the next month to understand more fully the
complex exhaust flow in this novel type of rocket.
The program reached this first
firing stage in less than a year. It has brought together
engineers from Reaction Engines Ltd, Airborne Engineering Ltd and
the University of Bristol in an attempt to quantify and validate
the performance of Expansion Deflection (ED) nozzles. Rocket
engines equipped with these devices should benefit from increased
performance in atmospheric flight, as the nozzle compensates for
the effect of changing ambient pressure, maximizing thrust. This
leads to an increase in payload delivered into orbit.
The STERN project is led by Dr
Neil Taylor, Lecturer in Aerodynamics in the Department of
Aerospace Engineering at the University of Bristol.
Dr Taylor said: “The flow
within ED nozzles is extremely complex and not well understood.
With the help of Reaction Engines I have been examining modeling
techniques for the ED nozzle for nearly a decade, but this is the
first time I've actually seen one fire. This test is a major step
forward and should give us a much better insight into what's
going on inside the engine.
“Test programs like this
usually take years and costs hundreds of thousands of pounds, but
we've done this in 12 months and on a relative shoestring, the
whole team has done a really good job but the guys from Airborne
Engineering who designed, manufactured and assembled the test rig
have worked near miracles. I’m looking forward to getting
all the data back to the lab and seeing how it compares to my
predictions.”
Reaction Engines Limited (REL)
provided the financial backing and driving force behind both the
STERN project and the previous ED Nozzle research at the
University of Bristol. The aim is to use this nozzle in the Sabre
engine that will power the Skylon reusable space launcher, where
it would decrease the take-off runway length as well as
increasing payload.
Alan Bond, REL Managing
Director, said: “STERN represents a major step in the [ED
research] program. The first objective is to prove the computer
model of the exhaust flow so we can have confidence in it when
it’s used to design the nozzles for Sabre. On top of this,
we’ve also been able to test the injectors [the holes that
let the propellants into the engine’s combustion chamber]
and the igniter [that ignites the propellants], that are the same
as the designs intended for the Sabre engines.”
The STERN engine burns hydrogen
and air (the same as the Sabre engine when in air breathing
mode). Inside the combustion chamber the temperature exceeds
2,400K (2,137 C), and a pressure of one hundred times that of the
atmosphere at sea level. Although the motor itself weighs less
than 30 kg, it produces more than 5,000 N (half a tonne) of
thrust.
Each firing is restricted to
less than 2 seconds, as any longer and the (un-cooled) chamber
walls could start to melt. However, the velocities in the flow
are so high that the flow is stable within milliseconds, and the
test time is more than adequate to generate accurate data.
The STERN (Static Test
Expansion/Deflection Rocket Nozzle) is a static test engine –
that is the engine is fixed to a test stand and does not move.
This enables extensive instrumentation to be attached to the
motor to fulfill the program's research objectives.
Source:
University of Bristol

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