LINEAR THROTTLING HIGH REGRESSION RATE VORTEX FLOW FIELD INJECTION SYSTEM WITHIN A HYBRID ROCKET ENGINE
20200063692 ยท 2020-02-27
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F05D2240/127
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K1/54
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K11/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02K9/72
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A hybrid rocket engine with a vortex flow field injection system that produces a high-speed sustained vortex flow field is described. The hybrid rocket engine includes a generally cylindrical injection chamber with an inner circumference to comprise an outer edge of a solid propellant grain in the hybrid rocket engine. The engine also includes an injection system that has a throttle valve and an injector that injects injection fluid into the engine and produces a vortex flow-field for the injected fluid. The injector includes at least one primary feed line that distributes the injection fluid throughout a pre-swirl chamber and multiple orifices along an inner edge of the injection chamber. The pre-swirl chamber connects to the injection chamber and at least one of the primary feed lines and redirects a primary fluid flow of the injected fluid from a primary axial direction to a centrifugal direction.
Claims
1. A vortex injector in a hybrid rocket engine comprising: one or more primary feed lines that receive axial flow of an injection fluid; one or more injection orifices that distribute injection fluid to an injection chamber; a pre-swirl chamber that transforms axial flow of the injection fluid into a centrifugal flow and distributes the centrifugal flow of the injection fluid to the one or more injection orifices; and an interface that routes the axial flow of the injection fluid from the one or more primary feed lines to a pre-swirl chamber.
2. The vortex injector of claim 1, wherein the interface between the one or more primary feed lines and the pre-swirl chamber begins redirection of the axial flow of the injection fluid to an off-axis flow.
3. The vortex injector of claim 1, wherein the one or more injection orifices atomize the injection fluid.
4. The vortex injector of claim 1, wherein the injector includes a central truncated spike.
5. The vortex injector of claim 1, wherein the injector includes a central hole for installation of at least one enhancer for enhancing hardware.
6. A linear throttle valve in a hybrid rocket engine, the throttle valve comprising: a generally cylindrical piston that actuates up and down in a linear manner in line with an axis of inlet flow for injection fluid; and a generally cylindrical chamber connected to the piston that redirects the injected fluid; wherein by linearly actuating the cylindrical piston, the injection fluid changes its volumetric rate in a linear relation to the cylindrical piston's position.
7. The linear throttle valve of claim 6, wherein the cylindrical piston is actuated with a pneumatic system.
8. The linear throttle valve of claim 6, wherein the cylindrical piston is actuated with an electric motor.
9. The linear throttle valve of claim 6, wherein the linear throttle valve is positioned in line with a flow inlet axis.
10. The linear throttle valve of claim 6, wherein the linear throttle valve is coupled with a vortex injector.
11. The linear throttle valve of claim 6, wherein at least one outlet port of the linear throttle valve is positioned so that the at least one outlet port redirects injection fluid flow to at least one inlet of the vortex injector.
12. A hybrid rocket engine with a vortex flow field injection system that produces a high-speed sustained vortex flow field, the hybrid rocket engine comprising: a generally cylindrical injection chamber having an inner circumference to comprise an outer edge of a solid propellant grain in the hybrid rocket engine; and an injection system that includes a throttle valve and an injector that injects injection fluid into the engine and produces a vortex flow-field for the injected fluid; the injector includes one or more primary feed lines that distribute the injection fluid throughout a pre-swirl chamber and a plurality of orifices along an inner edge of the injection chamber, wherein the pre-swirl chamber connects to the injection chamber and at least one of the primary feed lines and redirects a primary fluid flow of the injected fluid from a primary axial direction to a centrifugal direction.
13. The hybrid engine of claim 11, wherein each orifice in the plurality of orifices has a converging section
14. The hybrid engine of claim 12, wherein each orifice in the plurality of orifices has a diverging section
15. The hybrid engine of claim 12, wherein each orifice in the plurality of orifices has a converging and diverging section.
16. The hybrid engine of claim 12, wherein the cylindrical injection chamber is closed off at the top of the chamber with a conical spike at the center of the chamber to direct centrifugal flow ejected from the orifices down the primary axis of the engine.
17. The hybrid engine of claim 12, wherein the cylindrical injection chamber is closed off at the top of the chamber with a truncated conical spike at the center of the chamber to direct the centrifugal flow ejected from the orifices down the primary axis of the engine.
18. The hybrid engine of claim 17, wherein the spike has a hole passing through it, allowing for the insertion of an ignition system.
19. The hybrid engine of claim 18, wherein the hole is used for a preheater.
20. The engine of claim 12, wherein the plurality of orifices are stacked on top of each other in ring layers and each ring layer of orifices inject a different combustion reactant.
21. A rocket comprising the hybrid rocket engine of claim 12.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0049] The patent or application file contains at least one color drawing. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing will be provided by the USPTO upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
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[0070] Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0071] This specification describes a design of a throttleable hybrid rocket engine that produces a self-sustaining vortex flow pattern to slow an axial flow rate of injected fluid. This design slows axial fluid flow and increases a regression rate of a solid propellant grain in the hybrid engine, thus increasing the propellant grain's thrust and efficiency.
[0072] The design includes a linear throttling high regression rate vortex flow field injection system.
[0073] As shown, in one implementation, the engine may be fed oxidizer from an oxidizer tank 124 that is pressurized with a header gas from tank 126. Although header gas is not necessary, the gas may improve engine efficiency by maintaining a consistent pressure inside the oxidizer tank 124. In one implementation, oxidizer flows from the oxidizer tank 124 through an injection system that includes a linear throttle valve 118 and an injector 110. The injector 110 produces a vortex flow-field by translating the oxidizer flow into a centrifugal path within a pre-swirl chamber. The oxidizer then flows through injection orifices and to a propellant grain 120. This flow path forces a flame wall closer to the walls of the propellant grain 120, e.g., fuel grain, and increases a regression rate of the propellant grain.
[0074] The injection system may induce a vortex flow using flow effects observed in nature to influence the flow path and the mixing of combustion reactants and products. The created vortex may produce two different zones inside of the engine, e.g., engine 100, one in which high axial speed combustion products are forced into a center of the vortex and a second in which lower axial speed, high centrifugal speed reactants mix on an outer section of the vortex. This flow pattern encourages combustion reaction between fuel and an oxidizer to occur as close to a wall of the propellant grain as possible to increase the regression rate of the propellant grain.
[0075] After reaction, the linear throttling high regression rate vortex flow field injection system may force the flow into the center of the vortex as the flow flows down towards a nozzle 122 of the engine before being ejected and producing thrust. After combustion, the reactants, e.g., the fuel and oxidizer, from the reaction flow through a nozzle 122. The axial velocity of the reactants is relatively low, increasing the total amount of time that the reactants are in the engine, which allows for a more complete combustion reaction between the reactants, e.g., the fuel and oxidizer. This process increases the efficiency of the engine as well as increases the thrust since the reactants react homogeneously with each other and directly flow through the center of the vortex.
[0076] Although
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[0079] In one implementation, primary feed lines 116 evenly distribute injection fluid, e.g., an oxidizer or liquid fuel, throughout a pre-swirl chamber 114. As illustrated in
[0080] Injection orifices 112 may approach a generally tangential injection angle to a cylindrical side wall of an injector 110. Injection fluid is injected into the injection orifices 112. In one implementation, the injector forces the injection fluid through the orifices due to the pressure differential between the pre-swirl chamber and the combustion chamber. When the injection fluid passes through the injection orifices 112, the injection system 300 atomizes the injection fluid into microdroplets or gas so that the fluid will better mix with the solid propellant grain, e.g., the solid fuel grain or the solid oxidizer, during combustion.
[0081] Once the system atomizes the injection fluid, the injection fluid may have very low axial velocity and very high centrifugal velocity as illustrated in the flow field 304. The fluid flow is in the direction of the fluid velocity. The centrifugal flow can continue down the length of the port of the propellant grain 120 with consistent sustaining flow velocities 306. At the center of the vortex flow field, the combustion products, e.g., the exhaust gasses that are the result of the combustion reaction, can lose their centrifugal flow velocity as the products transition to an axial flow in an axial flow direction 308 that flows down the central axis and is ejected out of the nozzle, e.g., nozzle 122, of the engine. In addition, at the top of the vortex flow, the system may include a Carnot cycle 310 that pulls heat from the top of the solid propellant grain, e.g., fuel grain, port up into an injection chamber 304 at the bottom of the injector 110. This process increases the temperature of the injected fluid that stabilizes the combustion reaction in the engine.
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[0085] In one implementation of the injector 110, the axial flow of the injection fluid from a tank, e.g., tank 124 of
[0086] While accelerating the flow, the injection orifices 112 atomize the injection fluid into a gas or microdroplet form so that the injection fluid can evenly mix with either a solid fuel grain or a solid oxidizer. The atomized fluid flow field then flows in a high velocity vortex flow field in which a majority of the flow's velocity may be centrifugal with a minimal axial flow component. This high velocity vortex flow produces a low-pressure zone at the center of the vortex in the injection chamber 604. This low-pressure zone can produce a Carnot cycle, e.g., the Carnot cycle 310 of
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[0088] Once the reactants enter the center of the vortex and translate to an axial fluid flow, the combustion products flow down the center of the grain and out of the nozzle.
[0089] The injector and the linear throttle can be manufactured out of material with a high resistance to high temperatures, pressures, and ablation. For example, they can be made out of aluminum, stainless steel, or titanium.
[0090] In one implementation, a manufacturing process can make the injector as a single part using metal free-form additive manufacturing. The injector, e.g., injector 110, may not physically be made as one piece unless using additive manufacturing because of the uniquely-shaped structures inside of the injector. In another implementation, a more traditional subtractive manufacturing process can make the injector using multiple pieces and assembling them together as illustrated in
[0091] Other implementations of the injector are contemplated that provide different advantages. For example,
[0092] An enhancer can be an ignition system for the engine. The ignition system that is installed need only produce enough heat to increase the temperature of the grain material over that of its combustion point. This temperature can be achieved with a single use pyrogenic system such as a small solid rocket engine for single use ignition, or with a more complicated restartable ignition system. An example of a restartable ignitor is that of a catalyst system where the oxidizer passes through a catalyst that induces decomposition which produced sufficient heat to ignite the grain.
[0093] Additionally, the hole can be used for an enhancer such as a preburner system not unlike the disclosure in Bradford et al., Hybrid Rocket Combustion Enhancement. U.S. Pat. No. 5,582,001, issued Dec. 10, 1996. This preburner can also be used to ignite the engine if the preburner temperature is sufficiently above the ignition temperature of the grain material.
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[0095] The throttle 118 itself is comprised of two primary components: the throttle body 904 and the piston cylinder 906. By actuating the cylinder up and down, the total cross-sectional area of the throttle 118 changes in a linear relation to the position of the cylinder resulting in a linear change in fluid flow 908 during action. As illustrated, the position of the throttle 118 is inline with the flow inlet axis 910. In this implementation, the throttle has outlets 912 to which the flow can be redistributed. However, a throttle 118 can have more or less than four outlets. When the flow 908 is redirected to the off-axis outlets, the flow is transitioned with no stagnation points due to the natural flow transitions caused by the alignment of the piston 806 with the throttle-body 904.
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[0097] The integration of a purpose-built linear throttle 118 with the vortex injector 110 designed for integration with the throttle is illustrated in
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[0099] While this specification contains many specific implementation details, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of any invention or on the scope of what may be claimed, but rather as descriptions of features that may be specific to particular embodiments of particular inventions. Certain features that are described in this specification in the context of separate embodiments can also be implemented in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single embodiment can also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable subcombination. Moreover, although features may be described above as acting in certain combinations and even initially be claimed as such, one or more features from a claimed combination can in some cases be excised from the combination, and the claimed combination may be directed to a subcombination or variation of a subcombination.
[0100] Similarly, while operations are depicted in the drawings in a particular order, this should not be understood as requiring that such operations be performed in the particular order shown or in sequential order, or that all illustrated operations be performed, to achieve desirable results. In certain circumstances, multitasking and parallel processing may be advantageous. Moreover, the separation of various system modules and components in the embodiments described above should not be understood as requiring such separation in all embodiments, and it should be understood that the described program components and systems can generally be integrated together in a single software product or packaged into multiple software products.
[0101] Particular embodiments of the subject matter have been described. Other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims. For example, the actions recited in the claims can be performed in a different order and still achieve desirable results. As one example, the processes depicted in the accompanying figures do not necessarily require the particular order shown, or sequential order, to achieve desirable results. In some cases, multitasking and parallel processing may be advantageous.