ELECTRODE IGNITION AND CONTROL OF ELECTRICALLY OPERATED PROPELLANTS
20180003130 · 2018-01-04
Inventors
- Matt H. Summers (Marana, AZ, US)
- James K. Villarreal (Tucson, AZ, US)
- Mark T. Langhenry (Tucson, AZ, US)
- Jeremy C. Danforth (Tucson, AZ, US)
- John W. Walter (Tucson, AZ, US)
Cpc classification
B60R21/264
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02K9/94
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K9/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F42C19/0819
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K9/95
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02K9/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K9/95
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Electrical ignition of electrically operated propellant in a gas generation system provides an ignition condition at an ignition surface between a pair of electrodes that satisfies three criteria of a current density J that exhibits a decreasing gradient along an axis normal to an ignition surface, is substantially constant across the ignition surface and exceeds an ignition threshold at the ignition surface. These criteria may be satisfied by one or more of an angled electrode configuration, a segmented electrode configuration or an additive to the electrically operated propellant that modifies its conductivity. These configurations improve burn rate control and consumption of the available propellant and are scalable to greater propellant mass to support larger gas generation systems.
Claims
1. A gas generation system, comprising: a combustion chamber; an electrically operated propellant within the combustion chamber; and a pair of electrodes configured for coupling with an electrical power source, said electrical power source configured to apply an electrical input across the electrodes creating an ignition condition in which (a) a current density (J) through the propellant between the pair of electrodes on an ignition surface exhibits a decreasing gradient along an axis normal to the ignition surface, (b) a contour of the ignition surface approximately matches a contour of current lines between the electrodes such that current density J is approximately constant across the ignition surface and (c) the current density J at the ignition surface exceeds an ignition threshold as approximately all of ignition surface burns and regresses along the axis.
2. The gas generation system of claim 1, wherein the contour of the ignition surface approximately matches the contour of current lines between the electrodes to within 5% such that current density J is approximately constant across the ignition surface to within 5%.
3. The gas generation system of claim 1, wherein at least 95% of the ignition surface burns as the surface regresses along the axis.
4. The gas generation system of claim 1, wherein the system comprises at least 10 grams of the electrically operated propellant that is consumed as the ignition surface burns and regresses along the axis.
5. The gas generation system of claim 1, wherein the system comprises at least 100 grams of the electrically operated propellant that is consumed as the ignition surface burns and regresses along the axis.
6. The gas generation system of claim 1, wherein the system comprises at least 1,000 grams of the electrically operated propellant that is consumed as the ignition surface burns and regresses along the axis.
7. The gas generation system of claim 1, wherein said pair of electrodes are angled at greater than 0 degrees and less than 90 degrees with respect to each other such that a cross-section of the propellant between the electrodes increases in area along the axis normal to the ignition surface.
8. The gas generation system of claim 1, further comprising a conducting or non-conductive additive in the electrically operated propellant having a gradient concentration along the axis normal to the ignition surface.
9. The gas generation system of claim 1, wherein each of said electrodes comprises a plurality of sub-electrodes, further comprising a network of a relay and a plurality of switches that activate one pair of sub-electrodes at a time to propagate the electrical signal along the axis.
10. The gas generation system of claim 1, wherein the electrically operated propellant comprises an ionic perchlorate-based oxidizer such that the propellant has a self-sustaining threshold pressure of at least 500 psi at which the propellant once ignited by the electrical input cannot be extinguished and below which the propellant can be extinguished by interruption of the electrical input.
11. The gas generation system of claim 10, wherein the self-sustaining threshold pressure is at least 1,000 psi.
12. The gas generation system of claim 1, further comprising: a cylindrical rocket fuselage; an even number of four or more said electrodes spaced radially about a longitudinal axis of the cylindrical rocket fuselage embedded in said electrically operated propellant, each adjacent pair of said four or more said electrodes angled at greater than 20 degrees and less than 90 degrees with respect to each other such that a cross-section of the propellant between the electrodes increases in diameter along an axis normal to an ignition surface that regresses radially along the axis away from the longitudinal axis.
13. The gas generation system of claim 1, further comprising: a cylindrical rocket fuselage; wherein said at least two said electrodes extend axially about a longitudinal axis of the cylindrical rocket fuselage embedded in said electrically operated propellant; further comprising a conducting or non-conductive additive in the electrically operated propellant having a gradient concentration along the longitudinal axis normal to the ignition surface, wherein said ignition surfaces ignites at an end of the cylindrical rocket fuselage and regresses along the longitudinal axis.
14. The gas generation system of claim 1, further comprising: an airbag coupled to the combustion chamber, wherein the combustion of the electrically operated propellant generates pressured gas that is exhausted from the chamber to inflate the airbag.
15. A gas generation system, comprising: a combustion chamber; an electrically operated propellant within the combustion chamber; and a pair of electrodes configured for coupling with an electrical power source, wherein said pair of electrodes are angled at greater than 20 degrees and less than 90 degrees with respect to each other such that a cross-section of the propellant between the electrodes increases in diameter along an axis normal to an ignition surface, wherein said electrical power source is configured to apply an electrical input across the electrodes creating an ignition condition in which the ignition surface ignites and regresses along the axis.
16. The gas generation system of claim 15, further comprising: a conducting or non-conductive additive in the electrically operated propellant having a gradient concentration along an axis normal to an ignition surface.
17. The gas generation system of claim 15, wherein the system comprises at least 100 grams of the electrically operated propellant of which at least 95% is consumed as the ignition surface burns and regresses along the axis.
18. The gas generation system of claim 15, wherein the electrically operated propellant comprises an ionic perchlorate-based oxidizer such that the propellant has a self-sustaining threshold pressure of at least 500 psi at which the propellant once ignited by the electrical input cannot be extinguished and below which the propellant can be extinguished by interruption of the electrical input.
19. A gas generation system, comprising: a combustion chamber; an electrically operated propellant within the combustion chamber; a pair of electrodes configured for coupling with an electrical power source, a conducting or non-conductive additive in the electrically operated propellant having a gradient concentration along an axis normal to an ignition surface; wherein said electrical power source is configured to apply an electrical input across the electrodes creating an ignition condition in which the ignition surface ignites and regresses along the axis.
20. The gas generation system of claim 19, wherein the system comprises at least 100 grams of the electrically operated propellant of which at least 95% is consumed as the ignition surface burns and regresses along the axis.
21. The gas generation system of claim 19, wherein the electrically operated propellant comprises an ionic perchlorate-based oxidizer such that the propellant has a self-sustaining threshold pressure of at least 500 psi at which the propellant once ignited by the electrical input cannot be extinguished and below which the propellant can be extinguished by interruption of the electrical input.
22. A gas generation system, comprising: a combustion chamber; an electrically operated propellant within the combustion chamber, said electrically operated propellant comprises an ionic perchlorate-based oxidizer such that the propellant has a self-sustaining threshold pressure of at least 500 psi at which the propellant once ignited by an electrical input cannot be extinguished and below which the propellant can be extinguished by interruption of the electrical input; a pair of electrodes configured for coupling with an electrical power source; and a controller configured to apply the electrical input across the electrodes creating an ignition condition in which (a) a current density (J) through the propellant between the pair of electrodes on an ignition surface exhibits a decreasing gradient along an axis normal to the ignition surface, (b) a contour of the ignition surface approximately matches a contour of current lines between the electrodes such that current density J is approximately constant across the ignition surface and (c) the current density J at the ignition surface exceeds an ignition threshold as approximately all of ignition surface burns and regresses along the axis, said combustion generating pressurized gas within the chamber at levels less than the self-sustaining threshold pressure and to interrupt the electrical input to extinguish the electrically operated propellant.
23. The gas generation system of claim 22, wherein the system comprises at least 100 grams of the electrically operated propellant of which at least 95% of the encountered mass is consumed as the ignition surface burns and regresses along the axis up to the point of extinguishment.
24. The gas generation system of claim 22, wherein said pair of electrodes are angled at greater than 20 degrees and less than 90 degrees with respect to each other such that a cross-section of the propellant between the electrodes increases in diameter along the axis normal to the ignition surface.
25. The gas generation system of claim 22, further comprising a conducting or non-conductive additive in the electrically operated propellant having a gradient concentration along the axis normal to the ignition surface.
26. The gas generation system of claim 22, wherein each of said electrodes comprises a plurality of sub-electrodes, further comprising a network of a relay and a plurality of switches that propagate the electrical signal along the axis.
27. The gas generation system of claim 22, further comprising: an airbag coupled to the combustion chamber, wherein the combustion of the electrically operated propellant generates pressured gas that is exhausted from the chamber to inflate the airbag.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0022]
[0023]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0036] The challenge to provide electrical ignition that provides for control of the burn rate and efficient consumption of substantially all of the available propellant, and one that is scalable to combust greater propellant mass to support larger gas generation systems remains.
[0037] Referring now to
[0038] First, as shown in
[0039] Second, as shown in
[0040] Third, as shown in
[0041] Configurations that satisfy all criteria and particularly the second criterion are critical to scalability, efficiency and controllability. For propellant masses of at least 10 grams, 100 grams, 1,000 grams or more establishing and maintaining the gradient is required to concentrate the available power such that the current density J at the ignition surface exceeds the ignition threshold to sustain ignition. For such propellant masses the spacing between electrodes increases. Matching the contour of the ignition surface to the current lines such that the current density J is approximately constant across the surface is required to ignite and combust substantially all of the ignition surface. If the current density J exhibits even a minimal amount of variance across the ignition surface, for the larger propellant masses and greater electrode spacing, current will be concentrated at the peaks in the current density J and burn only at or near those peaks, typically at the surface of an electrode or a midpoint between the electrodes leaving a lot of propellant unconsumed. If the criteria are satisfied, substantially all of the available propellant, >95%, should be consumed. If combustion is interrupted, that means at least 95% of the available mass up to the point of extinguishment.
[0042] Let us first consider the performance and limitations of known ignition systems and electrode configurations for electrically operated propellants.
[0043] As shown in
[0044] As shown in
[0045] The coaxial electrode structure creates a current density J that is maximum at the center and falls off as 1/radius. This non-uniformity is further exacerbated by the insulative sleeve that concentrates the field lines at the center. For coaxial electrode structures on the order of ⅛″ in diameter, the electrical input is sufficient to overcome this non-uniformity and ignite the entire ignition surface. However as the diameter increases the current density J is too low to ignite and combustion is limited to a small area around the center electrode.
[0046] As shown in
[0047] The parallel plate structure itself would creates a current density J was uniform across the ignition surface. However, the concentration of the current lines at the bare end of the negative plate electrode 72 produces a non-uniformity in the current density J, which peaks at the negative plate electrode 72 and falls off towards positive plate electrode 70. For small structures, the electrical input is sufficient to overcome this non-uniformity and ignite the entire ignition surface. However as the plate spacing increases the current density J is too low to ignite and combustion is limited to a small area near negative plate electrode 72.
[0048] As shown in
[0049] None of the known electrode configurations satisfy all three criteria for ignition of an electrically operated propellant.
[0050] The present invention provides different configurations of electrode structures and electrically operable propellant in a gas generation system that provide an ignition condition at an ignition surface between a pair of electrodes that satisfies the three criteria of current density J that exhibits a decreasing gradient along an axis normal to an ignition surface, is constant across the ignition surface and exceeds an ignition threshold at the ignition surface. These configurations improve burn rate control and consumption of the available propellant and are scalable to greater propellant mass to support larger gas generation systems.
[0051] These configurations are useful for all varieties of electrical operated propellants. The configurations may be used with electrical operated propellants that exhibit no ability to be extinguished, propellants with a HAN-based oxidizer that exhibit a low self-sustaining threshold of about 150 psi, propellants with a perchlorate-based oxidizer that exhibit self-sustaining thresholds above 500, 1,000, 1,500 or event 2,000 psi. U.S. Pat. No. 8,950,329 which details the formulation of the perchlorate-based electrically operated propellant is hereby incorporated by reference. The gas generation systems may be configured to simply burn the entire electrically operated propellant to extinction at a given burn rate, to control the burn rate and burn to extinction, to turn the combustion on and off, and back on again.
[0052] Without loss of generality, an embodiment of a gas generation system with an electrically operated propellant that can be throttled and turned on/off/on as long as the chamber pressure remains below the self-sustaining threshold pressure will be presented. An exemplary electrically operated propellant includes a metal-based fuel of approximate 5 to 30 percent of the mass of the propellant, a liquid perchlorate-based ionic oxidizer of approximately 50 to 90 percent of the mass and a binder of approximately 10 to 30 percent of the mass.
[0053] Referring now to
[0054] Gas generator 102 includes a combustion chamber 108 having an electrically operated propellant 110 positioned therein. Two or more electrodes 112 extend into the electrically operated propellant 110 within the combustion chamber 112. A nozzle 114 is coupled to combustion chamber 112. Electrically operated propellant 110 includes a formulation that allows for the ignition and extinguishing of the propellant in a variety of conditions according to the application (and interruption of the application) of electricity through the electrodes 112. For instance, the electrically operated propellant 110 is configured to ignite with the application of voltage across the electrodes 112. Conversely, the electrically operated propellant 110 is extinguished with the interruption of the voltage at a range of chamber pressures (e.g., from 500 psi to 2000 psi) less than the self-sustaining threshold pressure. The two or more electrodes 112 and electrically operated propellant 110 are configured to produce an ignition condition that satisfies the three criteria. Ignition and combustion of the electrically operated propellant 110 produces elevated chamber pressures. Gas is exhausted through nozzle 114 to generate high pressure/high velocity gas for a particular application.
[0055] Controller 104 is shown as including in one example a generation module 120 (e.g., a flight module for a rocket or airbag inflation module for a vehicle). The generation module 120 is coupled with a voltage control module 122 and a power measurement module 124. In one example, the generation module 120 is a flight module, and the flight module is configured to control the amount of thrust provided as part of a rocket motor. For instance, as ignition, extinguishing and throttling of thrust output from the gas generator 102 is desired, the flight module is configured to provide this control by way of management of the electrical output to the gas generator through control of the voltage control module 122.
[0056] The voltage control module 122 is coupled along the electrical circuit between the power source 106 and the gas generator 102. The voltage control module 122 is in one example coupled with the power measurement module 124. The power measurement module is configured to measure the output of the power source and thereby facilitate control and administration of the appropriate amount of electricity such as voltage, current or the like to the gas generator through the voltage control module.
[0057] In an embodiment, the generation module 120 includes one or more of an ignition module 130 to control the application of the electrical input to the electrically operated propellant via the electrodes, an extinguishing module 132 to interrupt the application of the electrical input to extinguish combustion, a throttling module 134 to vary the electrical input to increase or decrease the burn rate and a pressure monitoring module 134 to measure the chamber pressure to provide feedback to the other modulates to control ignition, extinguishment and throttling. Each of these modules controls various corresponding functions of the gas generator 102.
[0058] Referring to
[0059] Referring to
[0060] Referring now to
[0061] Any two or more of the angled electrodes, non-conducting/conducting additive to the electrically operated propellant and segmented electrodes may be combined. Other configurations of electrode structures and propellant conductivity may be envisioned that satisfy the three criteria for efficient, controllable and scalable combustion of the electrically operated propellant.
[0062] Referring now to
[0063] Referring now to
[0064] Referring now to
[0065] An electrode structure and electrically operated propellant are configured to satisfy the three criteria. In an exemplary embodiment, the ignition system suitably comprising an even number of four or more electrodes 510 that extend into electrically operated propellant 508 within the combustion chamber 504. Electrodes 510 are spaced radially about a longitudinal axis 515 and embedded in an electrically operable propellant 514. Each adjacent pair of said four or more the electrodes is angled at greater than 20 degrees and less than 90 degrees with respect to each other such that a cross-section of the propellant between the electrodes increases in diameter along an axis normal to an ignition surface that regresses radially along the axis away from the longitudinal axis 515. The electrodes alternate as + and − electrodes. The + electrodes are connected to an external positive electrode 522 and the − electrodes are connected to an external negative 524 for connection to a power supply.
[0066] To inflate airbag 513, an electrical input is applied through positive and negative electrodes 522 and 524 to alternating electrodes 510 to produce a current density J at the interior ignition surface 520 between each pair of electrodes 510 that exceeds an ignition threshold. Each ignition surface ignites and regresses along axis normal to the ignition surface. The combustion of the electrically operated propellant generates pressured gas in combustion chamber 504. Pressure levels in the chamber reaching more than 500 psi but never more than the self-sustaining threshold pressure. Pressurized gas I the chamber is exhausted through opening 512 to inflate airbag 513. The electrical input is varied to vary a rate of combustion, hence varying the pressure levels in the chambers to control a pressure profile of the airbag. The electrical signal is interrupted to extinguish combustion of the propellant to control a total pressure impulse delivered to the airbag. Combustion may be turned on and off by application and interruption of the electrical signal
[0067] While several illustrative embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, numerous variations and alternate embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art. Such variations and alternate embodiments are contemplated, and can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.