Introduction to enthalpy as it relates to the fluid-cycle design of rocket engines.
http://exploration.grc.nasa.gov/education/rocket/enthalpy.html
Please allow me to add the following about isentropic compression/expansion.
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/compexp.htmlIf it will help, I'll provide a quick example of the calculations I've been doing.
Let's do the calculation for atomic hydrogen, H. As mentioned earlier, I assumed a turbine pressure ratio of 20:1, and let's assume our turbine inlet temperature is 1200 K. Atomic hydrogen has a specific heat ratio, γ, of 1.667 and it's
heat capacity, C
p, is 20.79 J/mol-K. Therefore,
T
2/T
1 = (P
2/P
1)
[1-1/γ]T
2/1200 = (1/20)
[1-1/1.667]T
2 = 362 K
(h
2-h
1) = C
p(T
2-T
1)
(h
2-h
1) = 20.79*(362-1200)
(h
2-h
1) = -17420 J/mol
So each mole of atomic hydrogen has 17.42 kJ less energy at the turbine outlet than it had at the turbine inlet.
I used atomic hydrogen in this example because its heat capacity (or
specific heat) and specific heat ratio is constant over all temperatures. The heat capacity and specific heat ratio of molecular gases vary with temperature (
here's an example), thus the calculations are more complicated. The calculations also include a mixture of different gases, and the composition of those gases vary with temperature. That is, the ratio of, say, H to H
2 changes as the temperature increases or decreases, with the molecular form dominating at low temperature and the atomic form at high temperature.
Because the calculations can become insanely complicated, a computer program is typically needed or else it would take forever to do just one calculation.
This is the e-book for Sutton and Biblarz, the standard work. The thermodynamics chapter is skimmable without having to buy the book.
http://books.google.com/books?id=pFktw0GYSX8C
Thanks for the reference. Although I haven't had a chance to study it yet, I'm sure I'll find it interesting.
Another e-book I've found helpful is this one
http://books.google.com/books?id=TKdIbLX51NQC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=falseThe part about gas generators starts on page 116. Note that page 118 states that the European Ariane uses one of the methods proposed by ka9q, i.e. using water as a diluent in a near-stoichiometric gas generator.
Also note that the gas generator example shown in Table 4-3 (page 119) indicates a LOX/RP-1 mixture ratio of 0.342, which is considerably lower than I was using. Redoing my calculations at the lower mixture ratio gives inlet and outlet temperatures of 1179 K and 891 K, and an enthalpy change of 1.2788 MJ/kg.
I've also redone my calculations using hydrogen peroxide at 90% concentration rather than 100% (It's my understanding 100% is unattainable). This changes the inlet and outlet temperatures to 1033 K and 524 K, with an enthalpy change of 0.8525 MJ/kg.
Yes, this is an awesome thread, and I'm sure LunarOrbit wouldn't object to splitting it off into the Reality forum.
I second that if Lunar Orbit doesn't mind doing it. We'd have to split off anything having to do with gas generators, preburners, and staged combustion.
Bob, what program are you using? Is it something I can rewrite to give you control over the ammonia dissociation?
I'm using freeware called STANJAN, written by Stanford University Mechanical Engineering Professor Bill Reynolds. The version I'm using has a 1984 copywrite. Being that old it's not very user friendly. I also had to create/format for myself most of the
JANAF data tables used by the program. Nonetheless, STANJAN has served me well over the years and I wouldn't have been able to accomplish half of what I have without it.
I've often wished I could write a Windows version that's easier to interface with, but I can't read the programming to figure out how it works. Just a few minutes ago a stumbled upon the following document, which might give me what I need to know. However, it's probably more of a pain in the neck to write a new program than to continue using what I already have.
http://www.stanford.edu/~cantwell/AA283_Course_Material/STANJAN_write-up_by_Bill_Reynolds.pdfRegarding the ammonia dissociation issue, I apparently figured out how to force STANJAN to give me what I want because I found old notes from an investigation I did several years ago regarding monopropellant engines. At that time I calculated the temperature, molecular weight, and specific heat ratio of hydrazine at different percentages of dissociation. For the life of me I don't remember how I did it. I'll probably eventually figure it out again.