Monday, March 11, 2024

More-Refined 1- vs 2-Stage to LEO

Because of repeated questions from knowledgeable readers,  I took a more refined look at the scenario of chemical launch to eastward LEO at low inclination,  using either an expendable two-stage to orbit design (TSTO),  or an expendable single-stage-to-orbit design (SSTO).  For this more refined look,   I added delta-vee (dV) budgets for rendezvous and deorbit,  I looked at a more representative orbital speed requirement,  and I let the second stage of a TSTO shoulder a minority of the gravity loss (the split being arbitrary).  The first stage shoulders all the drag loss.  The SSTO shoulders all of both losses.  See Figure 1

Figure 1 – Revised dV Requirements That Are More Realistic

The 75-25 split on shouldering gravity losses is arbitrary,  but “in the ballpark”.  I still picked 5% each for gravity and drag losses,  the basis being the kinetic energy-equivalent surface circular orbit speed.  5% gravity loss would go with good kinematics off the launch pad,  meaning 0.5 gee above gravity or better,  or a thrust/weight of 1.5 or better at launch.  5% drag loss would go with a clean,  slender shape,  really meaning a length/diameter ratio of 6 or larger,  with no steps in diameter. 

               TSTO Design Considerations

For the TSTO,  what I presumed was LOX-RP1 propulsion in the first stage,  “compromise”-sized to improve the ascent-averaged specific impulse (Isp),  such that the engine is just barely unseparated firing at sea level,  at 85% of max chamber pressure Pc.   I presumed LOX-LH2 propulsion in the second stage,  sized at an expansion area ratio (A/A*) = 100,  to limit engine length. 

Both the first and second stage engine technologies were presumed to be modest technologies that do not push the state of the art (SOTA) very hard,  something that lowers development costs that must be amortized over the launches to be made.  Accordingly,  I presumed only a max Pc = 2500 psia,  and that whatever cycle it is has,  has a dumped bleed fraction of 2%.  The pressure turndown ratio (P-TDR) for throttling is only 2.5.   The usual curved bell of 18-and-8-degree profile is presumed,  along with a throat area discharge coefficient CD = 0.995. 

Rather modest stage structural design technologies were also presumed,  such that both loaded-stage inerts were 5% of stage ignition mass,  again to reduce development costs that must be amortized over the launches to be made.  4% has been demonstrated,  but requires custom alloys,  even for expendables.  The definitions are such that payload fraction plus inert fraction plus propellant fraction sum to 1.  The first stage payload is the fully-loaded second stage,  and the second stage payload is a fixed 100 metric ton mass riding out in the open,  atop the second stage.

All propulsion was initially sized for a thrust requirement of 500,000 lb (226.76 metric tons-force,  2223.7 KN).  For any ascent engine,  this was imposed at sea level.  For the TSTO second stage,  this was imposed in vacuum.  Performance was computed vs altitude,  and those values averaged over the list of altitudes in the altitude table. 

That is not exactly correct for an “ascent-averaged Isp”,  because the vehicle does not spend equal time at all these altitudes,  but it is well within the “ballpark”.  I compensated for any error by presuming an Isp about 2-5 s below what the sizing calculation said.  Dimensions and flow rates depend upon sized thrust.  Flow rates and cross sectional areas scale in proportion to thrust,  while linear dimensions scale in proportion to the square root of thrust.  Isp does not scale.

The TSTO first stage sea level engine sizing to 500,000 lb thrust is shown in Figure 2.  The TSTO second stage vacuum engine sizing to 500,000 lb thrust is shown in Figure 3.  

Figure 2 – As-Sized TSTO First-Stage Engine Data,  Un-Rescaled

Figure 3 – As-Sized TSTO Second-Stage Engine Data,  Un-Rescaled

               SSTO Design Considerations

For the SSTO,  I looked at both LOX-LCH4 propulsion and LOX-LH2 propulsion.  Such engines were “compromise”-sized for better ascent-averaged Isp,  just like the first stage engines in the TSTO design.  However,  the technology baseline presumed,  pushes the SOTA very hard indeed:  these designs presume a max Pc = 4000 psia,  a cycle such that the dumped bleed fraction BF = 0,  and a more challenging P-TDR = 3.  (They would compare to the SpaceX Raptor designs.)

I kept the same rather modest stage structural design technology,  with a stage inert fraction of 5%.  In this case,  there is only one stage,  and its 100 metric ton payload rides out in the open,  atop the stage,  exactly the same as was presumed for the TSTO. 

The hydrogen-fueled version looked good enough to check the effects of just modest-technology.  That would use the LOX-LH2 propellant ballistic models,  but employ the same reduced Pc and non-zero-BF that was used for the TSTO engine designs.  The methane-fueled version had a low-enough payload fraction to warrant skipping this look.

Figure 4 shows the un-rescaled methane engine results for the edge-of-the-SOTA.  Figure 5 shows the un-rescaled hydrogen engine results for the edge-of-the-SOTA.  Figure 6 shows an un-rescaled hydrogen design of the same modest-technology parameters as were used in the TSTO design.  

Figure 4 – As-Sized SSTO Methane Engine,  Edge-of-the-SOTA,  Un-Rescaled

Figure 5 – As-Sized Hydrogen Engine,  Edge-of-the-SOTA,  Un-Rescaled

Figure 6 – As-Sized Hydrogen Engine,  modest SOTA,  Un-Rescaled

               Doing More Detail

In my previous posting on this topic,  “Launch to Low Earth Orbit:  1 Or 2 Stages?”,  posted 3 March 2024,  all I did was convert dV’s to mass ratios MR,  turn that into a list of mass fractions,  and then size a weight statement from a fixed payload mass.  I used the stage ignition masses to size total thrust requirements.  And that was it. 

I have since added to the simple spreadsheets I used for that analysis.  If you look at the stage overall thrust requirements and masses to be accelerated,  you can choose a number of engines appropriate for that stage,  and thus from that overall thrust requirement,  determine what those individual engine thrust ratings must be. 

I created a little thrust-resize spreadsheet,  which takes the as-sized engine data,  and rescales them to the necessary thrust rating.  Areas and flow rates scale as proportional to thrust,  while dimensions scale as proportional to the square root of thrust.  What is important is the estimated overall dimensions of an individual engine.  Part of Figure 7 illustrates how these engine dimensions are scaled and created from the estimated engine sizing data.

For only a 9-engine cluster,  I worked out how to use the engine dimensions and an assumed max gimbal angle to estimate a clearance spacing between engine bells so that gimballing one will avoid impacting an adjacent bell.   Adding this up along a diagonal of the 9-engine cluster provides an estimate of the min stage diameter,  as is also shown in Figure 7.  I used 15 degrees for the max gimbal angle,  an arbitrary choice.

Figure 7 – How Engine Dimensions Determine Stage Diameter

Once you have a min stage diameter estimate,  you can begin to approximate the lengths of the tanks,  engine bays,  and interstages.  Those lead to a vehicle length/diameter ratio estimate,  from which to judge whether the “slender” assumption justifying lower drag loss was justified.  This is based on the same diameter for the whole vehicle,  to also qualify as “clean”,  for justifying the lower drag loss assumption.

You can use an estimate of the engine’s operating r-ratio to split total propellant mass into oxidizer and fuel masses,  in each stage.  You can use the standard specific gravity values for those propellant materials to turn those oxidizer and fuel masses into volumes (specific gravity is numerically equal to density in metric tons per cubic meter).  Dividing volume by base area gets you a length of the tank that is an underestimate,  since there are curved pressure dome heads.  Compensate by assuming an inter-tank length of about a diameter. 

First stage (or single stage) estimated engine length is the length of the first stage engine bay (if there is one),  but is part of the overall first stage length regardless.  If there is a second stage,  there is some sort of interstage between it and the first stage,  whose length is the estimated overall length of a second stage engine.   The length of the payload is arbitrarily assumed to be 2 diameters.

The resulting augmented spreadsheet image for the TSTO design is shown in Figure 8.  The leftmost block is the original mass and thrust sizing calculations.  The rest is what I added to determine engine counts and thrusts,  and to use the re-scaled engine dimensions to do the volumes and lengths.   Images of the rescaled kerosene and hydrogen engine spreadsheets were not included,  but are reflected in the dimensional data input at top right. 

Figure 8 – Spreadsheet Image For TSTO Detail Sizing

A somewhat similar-looking spreadsheet was used for the SSTO designs,  starting with the LOX-LCH4 design looked at initially in the earlier posting.  That produces the detail sizing spreadsheet image of Figure 9,  and the associated engine re-scale spreadsheet image of Figure 10

Figure 9 – Spreadsheet Image For SSTO Detail Sizing,  Methane,  Edge-of-SOTA

Figure 10 – Spreadsheet Image For SSTO Engine Re-Scale,  Methane,  Edge-of-SOTA

The reader should be aware of one disconnect here:  I picked 15 engines,  not 9!  The stage diameter estimate is wrong:  it is too small!  That lowers the vehicle L/D ratio even further,  from the too-low value already obtained.  For this design,  the drag dV loss to cover should have been more than the 5% used in the velocity requirements analysis shown in Figure 1 above

So as it turns out,  the recommendation in the earlier posting to use the LOX-LCH4 propellant combination for the SSTO design has been shown to be wrong!  This also shows up in the 2.1% payload fraction and the enormous 4850 metric ton ignition mass,  given in Figure 9 above.

Accordingly,  I did another edge-of-SOTA design for the SSTO,  this time using LOX-LH2 propulsion.  The image of the detail sizing spreadsheet is given in Figure 11.  The engine dimension re-scaling is shown in Figure 12.  This one actually uses 9 engines,  so the diameter is “right”,  and so is the L/D.

Figure 11 -- Spreadsheet Image For SSTO Detail Sizing,  Hydrogen,  Edge-of-SOTA

Figure 12 -- Spreadsheet Image For SSTO Engine Re-Scale,  Hydrogen,  Edge-of-SOTA

Comparing the payload fractions and ignition masses between Figures 8 and 11,  7.5% and 1401 tons TSTO vs 7.5% and 1325 tons SSTO,  we see pretty much equivalent performance between the TSTO using LOX-RP1 and LOX-LH2 both at modest engine SOTA,  and the SSTO using all-LOX-LH2,  but at the edge of the engine SOTA.  Clearly the higher average ascent Isp of the hydrogen vs the methane made a huge difference for the SSTO,  more than I initially expected to see!

That brings up determining the effects of pushing the engine SOTA so hard with the SSTO engines.  To determine that,  I used the modest SOTA hydrogen ascent engine data of Figure 6 above,  to create yet another SSTO design sizing,  by these same methods.  The detail sizing spreadsheet image is given in Figure 13,  with the engine re-scale data in Figure 14.  

Figure 13 -- Spreadsheet Image For SSTO Detail Sizing,  Hydrogen,  Modest SOTA

Figure 14 -- Spreadsheet Image For SSTO Engine Re-Scale,  Hydrogen,  Modest SOTA

This one is not that much reduced in payload capability (6.7% vs 7.5% for the Edge-of-SOTA SSTO and the TSTO).  It increased its launch mass a little,  being 1487 metric tons,  vs 1325 for the edge-of-SOTA SSTO and 1401 for the TSTO.  Yet they are all 3 in the same basic class of vehicle sizes.  I did select 9 engines,  so the diameter is valid,  and the L/D is “good”.  There is no reason the more modest hydrogen engine technology might not serve,  and serve well.

               Results and Conclusions

Sketched images for the TSTO with modest-technology kerosene and hydrogen propulsion,  the SSTO with SOTA methane propulsion,  the SSTO with SOTA hydrogen propulsion,  and the SSTO with modest-technology hydrogen propulsion,  are given in Figures 15 through 18 below,  respectively.   

As the table above indicates,  it is ascent-averaged Isp that is the critical factor here with the SSTO.  The big gulf between the methane and hydrogen/SOTA ascent-averaged Isp’s corresponds to the big gulf between the payload fractions and the ignition masses.  The small gap between the hydrogen/modest and hydrogen/SOTA Isp’s corresponds to the small gap between payload fractions and ignition masses. 

Changing the propellant combination had a huge effect on ascent-averaged Isp and the resulting sized designs.  Changing how hard the hydrogen engine technology pushes the SOTA did not have a large effect,  only a smaller one.  The sized design reflects exactly that.  See also Figure 19 below

Before I ran this more detailed design study,  I thought that pushing the SOTA vs a modest technology would have more of an effect than it actually did.  Now we see:  the propellant combination has the far stronger effect.  Go ahead and use the more modest engine technology.  That will not stop you from doing rather well as an SSTO,  as long as you use LOX-LH2.

The hydrogen upper stage TSTO with modest engine technology is only a little better in terms of payload fraction than the hydrogen SSTO with modest engine technology.  But,  it does offer an easier path to partial reusability,  by substituting a larger lower stage with the ability to fly back and land.  That is something to consider. 

The “compromise” expansion sizing approach for ascent engines is very important,  as that is how one achieves ascent-averaged Isp values higher than an ordinary sea level design.

That sort of “ascent-averaged Isp is dominant” outcome for the SSTO makes me wonder if we could do better than a kerosene first stage for the TSTO.  While beyond scope here,  I will look at that in a future update or posting.  The candidates are methane and hydrogen,  of course.  These will be restricted to “modest engine technology”.  The same methods will be used,  as were used here.  

I do expect that one or both will significantly exceed what we can do with a modest-technology hydrogen SSTO.  The problem will be the same volume issues that afflicted the SOTA-technology methane SSTO.  But we will not know,  until we try. 

Figure 15 – Image of Detailed Results for TSTO,  Modest Kerosene and Hydrogen

Figure 16 – Image of Detailed Results for SSTO,  SOTA Methane

Figure 17 – Image of Detailed Results for SSTO,  SOTA Hydrogen

Figure 18 – Image of Detailed Results for SSTO,  Modest Hydrogen

Figure 19 – Plots Showing Relative Effect of Engine Technology Level and Propellant Combination

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Update 3-12-2024:

I carried out the plan outlined at the end of the article above,  to investigate two higher-performing propellants in the TSTO.  That required sizing a LOX-LCH4 engine of modest technology to be an ascent engine in the first stage.  I already had a LOX-LH2 ascent engine sized,  of modest technology,  investigated for the SSTO.  These were both resized to fit a 9 engine cluster of the necessary thrust,  just as in the studies done in the article above,  with the updated vehicle sizing. 

For these changes to the TSTO,  I did not change its second stage at all.  It was,  and still is,  powered by two small LOX-LH2 engines of modest technology,  sized as vacuum engines with A/A* = 100,  just as before.  The resized modest-technology methane ascent engine is illustrated in Figure 20 below.  The sized TSTO vehicle with that set of modest technology methane engines in its first stage is depicted in Figures 21 and 22 below. The sized TSTO vehicle with a set of modest technology hydrogen engines in its first stage is depicted in Figures 23 and 24 below

I did not see much difference between the kerosene and methane first stage TSTO vehicles in terms of payload fraction,  but the ignition weight did reduce somewhat,  going to methane.  A part of this is the reduced thrust requirement reducing engine lengths,  in a vehicle whose length and diameter are primarily sensitive to engine dimensions and number.  With a hydrogen first stage,  the payload fraction increased noticeably,  and the launch weight decreased significantly further. 

I had not reduced the ascent-average Isp of the modest technology hydrogen ascent engines by 2-5 s when I did the hydrogen TSTO in the article above,  inputting 447 s to the vehicle sizing.  Here,  I did,  inputting 445 s Isp to the vehicle sizing. I ignored this small difference making the comparison plots of trends with the two vehicles,  which is Figure 25 below.  The main takeaway is the lower slopes of the trends with the TSTO,  compared to the steep slopes of the trends for the SSTO. 

There is a good,  simple reason for that:  the TSTO second stage is vacuum hydrogen-powered,  and shoulders the majority of the dV requirement imposed on the vehicle.   That makes the first stage mass ratios rather small in comparison,  where the added benefit of higher first-stage Isp is “diluted” by the constant-second stage effects.  In contrast,  the SSTO has to get all the dV requirement out of its single stage.  The benefits of the higher Isp are entirely undiluted by anything,  hence the effects are large,  and the trend slopes are steep.

Figure 20 – Sized Methane Ascent Engine of Modest Technology

Figure 21 – Vehicle Sizing Data for Modest-Technology Methane Engines in the First Stage

Figure 22 – Vehicle Sketch for Modest-Technology Methane Engines in the First Stage

Figure 23 – Vehicle Sizing Data for Modest-Technology Hydrogen Engines in the First Stage

Figure 24 – Vehicle Sketch for Modest-Technology Hydrogen Engines in the First Stage

Figure 25 – Comparison Plots of Trends,  With All Vehicles

               Conclusions

The results here are for all-expendable vehicle sizings.  The conclusions apply to the same,  with exceptions for re-usability as stated in notes 7 and 8. 

#1. If you design a TSTO expendable “from scratch” for delivering large payloads to LEO,  always use a LOX-LH2 engine designed for vacuum operation to power the second stage. 

#2. If you design a TSTO expendable “from scratch” for delivering large payloads to LEO,   it does not matter very much which of the 3 propellant combinations you use for powering the first stage.  The trends favor LOX-LH2,  but these trends are weak (low slope).  LOX-RP1 and LOX-CH4 also serve well.

#3. Whether you design “from scratch” a TSTO expendable or an SSTO expendable for delivering large payloads to LEO,   use “ascent engines” with their expansion ratio designed as an ascent compromise:  just barely unseparated,  at around 85% max Pc,  at sea level.  Engines designed in this way will have a higher ascent-averaged Isp than traditional sea level engine designs,  which are generally perfectly expanded to sea level pressure at max Pc.  And the actual flight configurations  are testable at sea level in the open-air nozzle mode,  which helps to greatly lower development costs that must be amortized,  and to greatly lower development risks. 

#4. If you design “from scratch” an SSTO expendable for delivering large payloads to LEO,  go for the LOX-LH2 propulsion.  Because of the steep trends,  these designs are critically-sensitive to ascent-averaged Isp above all other considerations.  Only LOX-LH2 provides high enough Isp.

#5. Neither type of vehicle is extremely-sensitive to how hard the engine technology pushes the SOTA,  because the Isp difference is not all that large between high-SOTA and rather modest technology,  something true for all 3 propellant combinations.   With the more modest technology,  development risks and efforts are lower,  leading to lower development costs to be amortized.

#6. I did not evaluate the impact of stage structural design technology!  I got good results from the best of the designs at a rather modest stage inert mass fraction assumption:  5% inert in every loaded stage.  4% has been demonstrated,  but I deliberately chose not to push those limits!  The less demanding structural design lowers development effort levels and development risks,  thus lowering the development costs to be amortized.

#7. The TSTO offers a fairly easy path to partial re-usability,  by enlarging the first stage design to enable its flyback,  entry,  and recovery.  This is primarily enabled by the relatively-low (only supersonic) speeds at entry,  in turn imposed by the relatively low staging speed,  which also lowers the burn-back dV requirement.

#8. The SSTO does not offer an easy path to re-usability,  because the entry speeds are orbital-class hypersonic,  and the stage simply does not have the inert fraction to permit the design changes to make it into a survivable entry vehicle at all,  much less to land.  The “proof” is in the negative:  if this were not true as stated,  it would have already been done,  routinely,  along with first stage recoveries.

               Final remarks

Do not take these “designs” as ready-to-build!  While the engine ballistics and performance estimates are rather good,  the weight statements are less so,  and the dimensional estimates are only “ballpark”.   It is the trends that should be used to support real design candidate screening and selections.  Some of that screening I have done for you,  in this article. 

To address questions from knowledgeable readers,  I made the dV requirements more representative of vehicles that can get to orbit and rendezvous with a destination,  plus a deorbit capability for proper disposal.  But,  there are a lot of things that I did not address.

I did not address propellant ullage / engine relight issues,  and I did not address the unrecoverable propellant fractions that are inherent with any type of tank design.  Further,  I did not address the actual end dome shapes or designs of the liquid propellant tanks,  or the possibility of a common dome design,  which can be done with some propellant combinations,  but by no means all of them. 

These are not only “from scratch” vehicle ballpark design sizings,  they are also “from scratch” paper engine design sizings,  a start-point only for a real engine design and development effort.  I made absolutely no attempt in this work,  to use any pre-existing engine designs of any kind at all!   

My work here can be re-scaled to other delivered payload masses (the 100 metric tons that I used here was an arbitrary number),  so that the trends I uncovered can help guide real concept selection and real design efforts for other-size projects done by others.  If a pre-existing engine of the right propellant combination fits your design project,  so much the better!  Any development costs you can avoid are one less thing to amortize over the life of the product.  


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