I did this study without much forethought, because of all the hypersonic craft and
spaceplane stuff I have been seeing on LinkedIn. Much of that stuff ignores the issues that (1)
without a heat protection solution,
there is no credible hypersonic design,
and (2) combined-cycle propulsion is still at the concept and early test
stage, and scramjet s not quite yet
truly ready for application.
What I show here seems to be feasible, although it is not optimized. This is a study of a two-stage vertical takeoff, horizontal landing system, to be powered by liquid rocket engines
approximating the performance of SpaceX’s Raptor-2 designs. Each stage is a flat-bottomed wave-rider aircraft
with a delta wing, a butterfly
tail, and retractable landing gear. The second stage mounts on the first stage, belly-to-belly. As the vehicle leaves the sensible atmosphere
at only Mach 2, there is no danger from
shock impingement heating between the two parallel-mounted airframes.
The first stage booster aircraft has initial thrust/weight
of 1.5, and flies very nearly vertically
to the staging speed, achieved well
exoatmospheric, then it coasts to a very
high altitude (probably beyond orbit altitude),
and finally falls back. It
performs an entry burn to reduce its speed to about Mach 2 at around 130,000
feet, where the sensible atmosphere
begins. It then belly-flops to
subsonic, goes nose first, pulls out of the dive, and glides back to the base from which it was
launched. A short entry transient at
only Mach 2 allows the use of organic composites for the bulk of its
airframe, and it needs no heat shield at
all. It retains just enough propellant
to make a go-around burn at landing.
The second stage has a similar shape, just smaller.
It carries 5 metric tons of cargo internally, for delivery on-orbit. The system is sized to reach low-inclination
low Earth orbit. It has an ignition
thrust/weight of only 1.05, so that the
gravity turn effect has serious effect early in the ascent burn. It makes that ascent burn, then coasts to orbit altitude, where it makes a circularization burn. End-of-mission, it makes a de-orbit burn, then aerobrakes at high angle of attack to
about Mach 3 at 13,000 130,000 feet (corrected 9-26-2022). From there
it belly-flops subsonic, and then glides
to an approach to its landing. It
retains a bit of propellant to enable a go-around at that landing. This sizing includes carrying the entire
cargo mass back from orbit.
The basic concept is illustrated in Figures 1 and 2. As it turns out, no solid booster rockets were necessary. Figure 3 illustrates the approximations I
used for the go-around capability.
Figure 4 illustrates most of the other assumptions I made. Figure 5 has the results. Note that both craft have inert masses that
are 15% of their ignition masses! These
craft both have wings and landing gear,
unlike anything else flying into space today. The second stage orbiter must have a heat shield
and largely-metallic construction. The
first stage booster must have the structure and attachments to carry the second
stage at some large gee values.
It would be quite unrealistic to assume anything less
than 15% inert fractions for the two stages. However,
anything significantly larger would render the concept infeasible! Note that the 5 metric tons of cargo is just
about 1% of the cluster gross mass at liftoff.
Expendable and semi-reusable vertical launch rockets carry larger
payload fractions than that, which explains
their overall popularity over the decades.
Per flight cost must be lower, to
make the low payload fraction attractive.
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Update 8 Sept 2022: What this study explores is almost exactly the original design concept for the Space Shuttle, which originally was a 2-stage spaceplane vertically-launched, with both stages landing horizontally, using wings. The Shuttle was fueled with hydrogen, leading to bulky fuel tanks and sizes, and the resulting very serious aerodynamic drag problems. Shuttle stages in that original concept did not have go-around capability at landing. They were "dead stick" gliders. (We all know how that concept got changed to the semi-reusable cluster that actually flew, for budgetary reasons.)
My study here is methane-fueled, avoiding most of the bulkiness and drag problems (and the notorious hydrogen leak problems). I did allow for a minimal go-around capability at landing, with both stages. What I noticed was the criticality of selecting the "right" staging speed, and the very narrow window of feasible inert masses in both stages!
Most people use too low an inert mass fraction to be realistic, and the resulting performance results fool them into thinking they have a feasible design with breakthrough performance. Nothing could be further from the truth. Even my 15% inert fractions may be too low in terms of realism, but if any higher, the feasibility goes away almost immediately as deliverable payload zeroes.
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While you cannot really do this in the real world, this study is simple enough that everything
(masses and thrusts) scales proportional to delivered payload mass. Example:
if 10 tons, double everything.
Figure 1 – Basic Two-Stage Spaceplane Flight Plans for
Vertical Takeoff, Horizontal Landing
Figure 2 – Basic Two-Stage Spaceplane Shapes and Inboard
Layouts
Figure 3 – Outline of the Go-Around Approximation
Figure 4 – Most of the Remaining Assumptions Illustrated
Figure 5 – Summary of the Results Obtained, Not Optimized, Just Feasible
Values Used for Propulsion
The SpaceX Raptor-2 engines provided the Isp ranges used
here. I did not specifically use the
SpaceX thrust values, nor did I size engine
counts. The vacuum and sea level designs
share the same power heads, but with
different expansion bells. The sea level
engine has a 40:1 expansion ratio (curved bell). The vacuum engine has a 150:1 expansion ratio
(curved bell). Performance is listed at
full chamber pressure 4400 psia. It is
lower, if throttled down. Update 10-5-2022: had to correct the table -- had the sea level and vacuum numbers swapped for the sea level design.
References:
#1. G.W. Johnson, “Rocket
Engine Calculations”, paper yet to be
posted here on “exrocketman”, which
shows how to get close estimates of liquid engine performance, and uses the SpaceX Raptor-2 sea level and
vacuum engines as examples. Update 10-5-2022: this article now posted as of 10-1-2022, under the indicated name.
#2. Pratt & Whitney “Vest-Pocket Aeronautical
Handbook”, 12th edition, 21st printing, Dec. 1969,
for the US 1962 standard day atmosphere data within.
This is really interesting! I've always seen comments on all-rocket-propulsion spaceplane concepts as being unrealistic but this is more convincing.
ReplyDeleteIt can be done, and with chemical propulsion, if you can accept a low payload fraction, and you can reduce inert masses enough.
Delete"While you cannot really do this in the real world"
ReplyDeleteHave we considered Sierra's Dream Chaser ?
Dream Chaser was to launch using the expendable Atlas-5, and is to launch using the possibly partly-reusable follow-on to Atlas-5. What I looked at was a fully reusable concept that was originally looked at for the Space Shuttle, but actually has never yet flown.
DeleteWhat the comment "cannot do this in the real world" refers to, is the crude scaling from one payload mass to another. The oversimplified analysis can be scaled so simply, a real design cannot.
Delete