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Printing the next generation of rocket engines
Space News ^ | 7/19/18 | Jeff Foust

Posted on 07/19/2018 3:12:13 PM PDT by LibWhacker

Printing the next generation of rocket engines

by — July 19, 2018
Additive Rocket Corp. combines additive manufacturing with a tool called generative design, where computer algorithms develop thousands of different designs that meet a set of constraints and then iterate on them to find the optimal solution. Credit: ARCAdditive Rocket Corp. combines additive manufacturing with a tool called generative design, where computer algorithms develop thousands of different designs that meet a set of constraints and then iterate on them to find the optimal solution. Credit: ARC

This article originally appeared in the June 25, 2018 issue of SpaceNews magazine.

New technologies, when first introduced, often get applied in traditional ways. For the last several years, aerospace companies have been examining ways to use additive manufacturing, or 3D printing, to aid the production of rocket engines. A prime example of this is Aerojet Rocketdyne, which has been working on printing components of its venerable RL10 engine. In early June, the company announced that a printed copper thrust chamber successfully completed a series of hotfire tests.

For Aerojet, using additive manufacturing helps to reduce the number of parts in engine components, and thus speed up production and lower costs. “You reduce the time to produce that part well in excess of 50 percent,” said Eileen Drake, president and chief executive of Aerojet Rocketdyne, in an April interview. “There’s less labor content, less supplier content, [fewer] parts that you have to put together that could cause an issue.”

The use of additive manufacturing is a key element in Aerojet’s updated version of the engine, the RL10C-X, intended to lower its cost without compromising reliability or performance. Aerojet is developing that engine with United Launch Alliance, who plans to use it in the upper stage of its Vulcan rocket under an agreement the companies announced in May.

Ultimately, though, the RL10C-X, even with its additively manufactured components, is fundamentally the same engine that first flew on an Atlas Centaur rocket nearly 55 years ago. The same is true for many other engines that incorporate additive manufacturing: the goal is not to make them radically different, but instead cut costs and production times. Even startups like Rocket Lab, which uses 3D-printing for all the major components of the Rutherford engine that powers its Electron rocket, ends up with an engine that looks like most other engines.

Over time, though, as companies get familiar with new technologies, they find novel ways to take advantage of their capabilities. That’s what one startup hopes to be able to do with additive manufacturing as applied to engines.

“What additive manufacturing does is that it opens up the opportunities of design freedom and removes all the traditional barriers that engineers have to keep in mind,” said Andy Kieatiwong, co-founder and chief executive of Additive Rocket Corporation (ARC), during a presentation at the Space Tech Expo conference in Pasadena, California, in May.

Despite being a recent college graduate, Kieatiwong is a veteran in the additive manufacturing field. As a student at the University of California San Diego (UCSD), he was part of a NASA-funded project to develop a small 3D-printed engine, becoming the first student group to successfully build and fire such an engine.A 3D-printed thrust chamber assembly for the next generation of RL10 rocket engines undergoes hotfire testing at Aerojet Rocketdyne's facility in West Palm Beach, Florida. Credit: Aerojet RocketdyneA 3D-printed thrust chamber assembly for the next generation of RL10 rocket engines undergoes hotfire testing at Aerojet Rocketdyne’s facility in West Palm Beach, Florida. Credit: Aerojet Rocketdyne

The students who were part of that project went off to various companies, including a stint at SpaceX for Kieatiwong. There, he worked on the company’s Draco and SuperDraco thrusters, which also incorporate additive manufacturing. But when he talked with some of his fellow former students, they shared a similar conclusion.

“We realized there was this gap in the industry,” he said. “They were printing components for their systems, but we saw that a lot of the components they were printing actually could still be traditionally manufactured.”

That led him, along with another former UCSD student, Kyle Adriany, to establish ARC to build engines in a very different way using additive manufacturing. “We set out to take a conventional bi-propellant rocket engine and perfect it,” Kieatiwong said. “Essentially, we boiled it down to its core functionality of moving fluid and moving heat, and we said, ‘What do we need to do to make it the most optimized thruster we can?’”

ARC combines additive manufacturing with a tool called generative design, where computer algorithms develop thousands of different designs that meet a set of constraints and then iterate on them to find the optimal solution. That can result in designs that are not possible to produce without 3D printing and can even be beyond the imagination of conventionally trained engineers.

The company used this approach on its first engine, a small regeneratively cooled engine dubbed Nemesis “because it caused us a lot of problems and headaches,” Kieatiwong said. The exterior looks like a typical engine, but he showed cutaways of its interior that revealed dozens of channels carrying kerosene and liquid oxygen in patterns than he likened to blood vessels or a tree trunk. “That’s one of the best ways to move fluid through a system,” he said.

That “biomimetic” architecture is a hallmark of generative design. “The benefits of this system cascade up through the entire propulsion system,” he said. It lowers the pressure differential in the engine, so less energy is needed to move the fuel, which reduces the size of valves, pumps and tanks supporting the engine. It also improves the heat transfer through the nozzle to lower its temperature, increasing its lifetime.

The company is also taking this approach on other engines, including smaller monopropellant and cold gas thrusters intended for use on spacecraft. Those designs, he said, can improve performance and reduce the mass of such thrusters, making them viable for small satellites.

ARC is still an early-stage company, having raised an undisclosed seed round. The seven-person company is based next to UCSD and is currently looking for partners in the launch vehicle and satellite industries to help accelerate its development and testing work.

The company isn’t alone in exploring new ways to apply additive manufacturing to propulsion and related systems. Relativity Space, for example, is working to 3D-print entire rockets, including their engines, and has raised tens of millions of dollars to support its work. Kieatiwong, though, is hopeful that his company can achieve a breakthrough with its new approach to engine design.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Science
KEYWORDS: additive; elonmusk; engines; falcon9; falconheavy; printing; rocket; spacex
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1 posted on 07/19/2018 3:12:13 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker

When I get my printer, I’m going to print a whole new earth.

Just in case...


2 posted on 07/19/2018 3:16:05 PM PDT by DannyTN
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To: LibWhacker
That “biomimetic” architecture is a hallmark of generative design

Very cool!

3 posted on 07/19/2018 3:23:26 PM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either satire or opinion. Or both.)
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To: LibWhacker; Moonman62; Red Badger
Printed engines and other components greatly accelerated SpaceX' development.

4 posted on 07/19/2018 3:39:13 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (www.tapatalk.com/groups/godsgravesglyphs/, forum.darwincentral.org, www.gopbriefingroom.com)
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To: LibWhacker
a printed copper thrust chamber successfully completed a series of hotfire tests...

That info leads to more questions. I believe copper melts well below rocket exhaust temperatures. The thrust chamber, whatever they are made of now, gets red hot. Perhaps the copper is not the exposed-to-exhaust layer.

5 posted on 07/19/2018 3:52:02 PM PDT by C210N (Republicans sign check fronts; 'Rats sign check backs.)
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To: DannyTN

I’d be happy printing a capstone for one little patch of earth in DC...


6 posted on 07/19/2018 4:21:52 PM PDT by logi_cal869 (-cynicus-)
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To: LibWhacker

Thanks for the post.


7 posted on 07/19/2018 4:25:25 PM PDT by NEWwoman (God Bless America)
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To: LibWhacker

Gets even more bizarre, at least to me.

Met a guy last week who works for a company that are using a patients cells to 3-D print lungs for transplant!!!

I can’t conceptualize this!

I need to read “3-D printing for Dummies.”


8 posted on 07/19/2018 4:29:09 PM PDT by lizma2
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To: lizma2

Wow! Do you know the name of the company?


9 posted on 07/19/2018 4:34:30 PM PDT by Bellflower (Who dares believe Jesus? He says absolutely amazing things, which few dare consider.)
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To: lizma2

Yup, Chapter 1 - Printing Organs. Wait’ll they start printing brains. I think I need a new one of those!


10 posted on 07/19/2018 4:35:38 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: lizma2
It's coming! ...

https://www.google.com/search?source=hp&ei=PyBRW46EF4vb_wTuhZ_ADg&q=3d+printing+organs&oq=3d+printing+organs&gs_l=psy-ab.3..0l10.3736.8509.0.9014.18.11.0.7.7.0.172.1091.5j5.10.0....0...1c.1.64.psy-ab..1.17.1121...0i131k1.0.EoiL_HNBngA

11 posted on 07/19/2018 4:38:49 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: Bellflower

Poop. No. Tri something. I was just so flabbergasted at the info the early info got buried.

But google 3-D organs and see the results; Here one

http://www.digitaljournal.com/tech-and-science/science/3d-printing-could-solve-organ-transplant-shortage/article/499166

AMAZING!


12 posted on 07/19/2018 4:50:30 PM PDT by lizma2
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To: LibWhacker

Couldn’t get the info to download from your post.

Could you please repost an another internet page or format??

I would like a new brain too and a body that doesn’t ache and can stay up to midnight and get up at 5.

Don’t think “Super Beets” is gonna get me there. LOL.

I find this stuff fascinating.


13 posted on 07/19/2018 5:14:54 PM PDT by lizma2
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To: LibWhacker; AFPhys; AD from SpringBay; ADemocratNoMore; aimhigh; AnalogReigns; archy; ...
3-D Printer Ping!

Political power grows out of the nozzle of a 3-D Printer.

14 posted on 07/19/2018 5:17:47 PM PDT by null and void (Freedom is in our blood, we don't pass it down genetically, but through the blood we spill.)
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To: Bellflower

No. I was too shocked.

Google 3-D organs.

Lordy, This seems impossible. Need to read.


15 posted on 07/19/2018 5:22:10 PM PDT by lizma2
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To: C210N

One can create the engine such that the cold fuel or oxidizer cools the engine on it’s way to the thrust chamber.


16 posted on 07/19/2018 5:23:27 PM PDT by kosciusko51
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To: null and void
I'll need one off a Saturn V to get my import up to speed.

To the Moon!


17 posted on 07/19/2018 5:31:07 PM PDT by SaveFerris (Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold ......)
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To: C210N
Therefore, temperatures used in rockets are very often far higher than the melting point of the nozzle and combustion chamber materials (~1,200 K for copper). Two exceptions are graphite and tungsten, although both are subject to oxidation if not protected. Indeed, many construction materials can make perfectly acceptable propellants in their own right. It is important that these materials be prevented from combusting, melting or vaporising to the point of failure. This is sometimes somewhat facetiously termed an "engine-rich exhaust". Materials technology could potentially place an upper limit on the exhaust temperature of chemical rockets.

Many fun details here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocket_engine

18 posted on 07/19/2018 5:38:01 PM PDT by DUMBGRUNT (This Space for Rent)
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To: lizma2

Copy and paste. If that doesn’t work, just search Google for ‘Printing Organs’, which from your post #12, looks like you’ve already essentially done that search. Yeah, the future looks like it’s going to be mind-blowingly awesome!


19 posted on 07/19/2018 5:50:11 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: DannyTN

Cool. What are you going to call it?


20 posted on 07/19/2018 6:02:49 PM PDT by jmacusa (Made it Ma, top of the world!'')
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