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I just got the book "Mechanics and Thermodynamics of Propulsion",
mostly on the recommendations found in the sci.space.tech archives. I turned to Appendix 2 to find tables with specific heat vs temp for the various gases that you find in a rocket engine (O2, CO2, CH4, H2, H2O, that sort of thing). Hooray! Imagine my disappointment when I noticed that the tables were specifically for gases at low pressure -- 1 atm. That pressure doesn't come up very often in simulations of rocket engines and hypervelocity guns. I've looked on the web, but have not found a reference for specific heats of these gases at high pressures. I'm mostly interested in the 100 - 1000 atm range. Am I just being stupid or unread? Is there some bog-standard adjustment that I'm supposed to make to these specific heats to account for pressure? Or did some guy in 1886 prove that specific heats are completely independent of pressure? |
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Ed How accurate are you trying to be?
Probably more accurate than neccessary. I'm writing a simulator for a travelling charge gun burning high-pressure CH4-O2. This first simulator is terribly crude -- I've cut the gas slug behind the projectile into a stack of disk-shaped homogenous gas masses, I'm assuming completely uniform axial gas motion, and the burn rate model is a a*(1-f)*e^(b*f) limited exponential. So all this is highly inaccurate. On the other hand, I've read papers from the 1950s that suggest that guns less than 100 caliber lengths lose just a few percent to drag losses, and I'm just trying to get some rough estimates of muzzle velocity versus barrel size and pressure (i.e. cost). Since I don't have any idea how much Cp changes over pressure, I don't know if it's an ignorable effect or if it dominates lots of other effects. And if I can just write a Cp(pressure, temp, species) function from a bunch of accurate tables and never have to worry about that again, that'd be great. Actually, I'm so thermodynamically retarded that I'm going to have to prove to myself that the second law of thermodynamics still holds with these varying specific heats. Even just that isn't clear to me yet. Eventually I may try a Navier-Stokes integration. My current ignition scheme is to use electronically triggered gunpowder charges funnelled through little nozzles to inject hot gas into the cold CH4-O2 mix. I expect there are probably some very serious problems with this idea near the end of the launch, where the gunpowder product jet is moving slower than the CH4-O2 behind the projectile. Maybe that next simulation will show some of these problems, maybe not. Ed In my copy of NASA SP-3045, Compressed Gas Handbook, Compressed Air and Gas Handbook, John P. Rollins Ed.? Ed the variation of the Cp of air as a function of pressure is small Ed at higher temps. Data eyeballed off graph: T (F) Cp @ 0psia (Btu/Lbm) Cp @ 15,000psia (Btu/Lbm) 500 0.248 0.289 1000 0.265 0.288 2000 0.283 0.2835 3000 0.295 0.301 4000 0.3045 0.3065 Hmmm. at 1000F there's a 10% diff. That'll show up. FWIW, this data is courtesy of the Cornell University, Engineering Experiment Bulletin No.30. Where the data included for other gases also came from. Couldn't find that one the web. I don't suppose there is a web reference for all this data? |
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