Most designs must provide at least the min net positive
suction head (10-100 psi) for the engine pump,
whatever that is. A few tank
designs are for pressure-fed engines,
something like 2-3 times the engine chamber pressure. That overpressure (tank pressures anywhere
from 1000 to 5000 psi) is for the pressure drop or drops through the flow
regulator.
Internal pressure is difficult to design for, and always ends up being heavy, for anything but simple circular cross
sections, period. The only feasible conformal design is
“lobed”, parts of circular sections
“stitched” together into an approximation of the noncircular space to
be occupied. In effect, you build the equivalent of an air
mattress.
This sort of thing is still today far easier to do with metals and
welding than with composites, because
of the inherent difficulties with composite joints (especially at
higher pressures). How to reliably
design the joints between composite components,
or between composite and metal components, is another topic for another time.
Especially with hydrogen,
the inherent porosity of a composite requires some sort of nonporous
liner, even if it is a paint
layer, no matter how “wet” your layup is
(and “wet” layups are much heavier).
This zero-porosity liner requirement raises composite panel weight
significantly. There is no way
around that dilemma.
The best structural joints with composites are fully “glassed-in”
joints. Unless you have a conformal tank
with lobes big enough for a man to crawl inside, this can be difficult or impossible to do.
With current material technologies, all of the preceding facts of life are why I
personally favor metals and welding for conformal tankage.
Liquid hydrogen tanks down here on Earth are usually made of 300-series
stainless steel, and for very good
reasons. These tanks can be filled and
refilled for decades without cracking,
in spite of the super-cold propellant-induced thermal stress
cycles, cycling that is excruciatingly
severe. The new lithium-aluminum
alloys now favored for rocket stage tank construction seem to work for liquid
hydrogen quite well. I am not familiar
with that material, since it is so new, and I am not.
The effects of repeated fill cycles may cause
aluminum-lithium to crack from fatigue (something inherent with all metals, and notorious with aluminum alloys). That sort of difficulty is not something you
“run into” with one-shot throwaway stages.
But, if it doesn’t crack with
repeated use, or there are lots of
cycles available before it does crack,
then reusable tank structures are possible with it. We’ll see.
Lobed construction with metals does not require the
extensive use of doublers (except near ends where the strain mismatches), unless
you badly design the shapes.
Ideally, you join segments of
cylinders together, with a properly-perforated
(again, a whole other topic) linear web-wall
at the joint. The only “trick” is to eliminate
all bending by your chosen geometry.
These panels are butt-welded to a three-way joint piece at every joint
line. That joint piece has a cross
section that looks like a three-prong grass burr, radiused down in the “groins” at the base of
each prong. That radius need only be at
most a little larger than the panel thickness.
Done successfully,
you have a tank only a few percent heavier than a cylinder of the same
volume, but not heavier by factors. It will be at least a little bit heavier, that is inevitable. That’s simply the price you must pay for the
shape you want. Update 10-7-13: for the same panel thicknesses and weights as cylindrical construction, a lower-bound estimate of the weight growth factor is the perimeter length ratio, computed from cross-section views.
That joint piece could be made by extrusion. Each leg of the joint piece is the same
thickness as the panel that joins to it,
and must match the tangent at the edge of the panel. Only through the cross section of the
three-way joint piece is the effective thickness about twice that of the
panels. This shape’s stress distribution
has been checked with 3-D finite element analysis: it works fine. There will be a tiny amount of shear yielding
down in each “groin” line, but only on
the first pressurization cycle.
You could use wire-feed welding to assemble the tank, but you have to put a slightly-bulging weld
bead on both sides. That means a man
must be able to crawl inside each lobe, and be able to weld inside there. Wire feed welding works very well with
aluminum, though.
If the tank were a stainless steel like D6ac or 4130, you can electron beam-weld right through from one
side, with nearly-perfect weld strength
efficiency. Weld the joint pieces to the
web walls, then weld the outer shell panels
to the joint pieces, all from the
outside. Then proof test. The reject rate should be low, once your process is defined. One-side electron beam-welding of steel is a
well-proven industrial technology for the mass production of solid rocket motor
cases.
About a quarter century ago,
I proposed exactly that electron beam-welded, stainless steel lobed design, for a small conformal-case solid rocket motor
case, to meet a seemingly-idiotic shape
requirement for a weapon project (that ended up never flying). The customer expected to see some version of elliptical
designs proposed, which simply do not
work unless they are extremely heavy.
Preconceptions clouded his ability to see a lightweight solution that
would work.
Questioning the assumptions you would otherwise start
with, has been the most powerful tool in
my engineering arsenal for nearly 4 decades now.
Mastering non-conformal tank technology is required for any
winged or lifting-body spaceplane,
whether it be one stage or two.
Chemical, nuclear, or something not yet invented, this requirement still holds for best-storing
whatever propellant is required, within
the odd spaces inside the vehicle.
Metals we know how to handle in this application, composites not so very much. And that plus politics is really why the X-33
program ended up unsuccessful. It really
should have started with the metal tanks in the first place, but the folks working on it were seduced by
the higher strength-to-weight ratio of composites. In a pressure tank situation, those advantages tend to evaporate in the
harsh light of all the other design issues.
That picture of things hasn’t changed,
and probably never will.
After reading this,
some of you may wonder why I haven’t been “snapped-up” by a Boeing or a
Lockheed-Martin. The answer is
simple: I’m old, and old guys are more expensive.
Having the wide-ranging cross-disciplinary experiences of an
old guy on your team, may well help guide
you very cost-effectively to the “right” solution for your project. But, the way R&D is funded by the government in
this country, project success is not
required. So labor cost is the
only factor considered in government contractor hiring. Few-to-none of us old guys get hired.
That has led to a widely-unrecognized lost-art problem. The engineering project team is supposed to
consist of a mix of old guys and young guys.
The old guys pass on to the young ones that engineering art that was
never written down. It wasn’t written
down, primarily because the company
didn’t want to pay for writing it down.
That art is about 40% of engineering practice in aerospace work.
If there are no old guys on the team, no art gets passed down. Which lack neatly explains why different
outfits keep reinventing all the same wheels,
and why progress with flying machines has slowed in the last few decades.
Few are learning from industry history anymore, because those who knew that history are
largely no longer there. You cannot get
that kind of knowledge from a college classroom, it is dirty-fingernails workplace
experience, pure and simple.
GW
Thanks very much for that post. DARPA wants again to investigate a reusable first stage booster. The X-33 could perform that role even if replacing its composite tanks with metal ones.
ReplyDeleteHowever the hydrogen conformal tanks weigh twice as much as cylindrical ones and the oxygen ones, *four times* as much. It would be a major big advance if you could get the tank mass to be similar to that of the cylindrical ones.
I'm thinking of applying to DARPA with some suggestions for their spaceplane program. Perhaps we could collaborate.
Bob Clark
A really excellent and informative post!. Thank you for this!
ReplyDeleteMarcel
Bob: If I could help with some proposal of yours to DARPA, then count me in. GW
ReplyDeleteGood article "GW", especially those last remarks. I share your pain. -signed an even older Rocketman :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Billy. I really appreciate your comments. Glad you liked the article. -- GW
DeleteI didn't realize that these high pressure tanks had so many stresses on them. I had never considered how the ultra cold propellants would effect the steel or metal alloy. That makes sense why you want to make sure to buy a quality pressure tank from a fabricator that knows what they are doing.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bwsfabrication.com
nice post used stainless steel containers usa!
ReplyDelete