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Can anyone help with a Chemistry question? I understand that the Shuttle
engines burn hydrogen/oxygen in a ratio of 3/1. What is the equation for this reaction? I teach high school chemistry and quote the equation 2H2 + O2 -- 2H2O. e.g ratio of 2/1. I assume the 3/1 ratio means that the fuel mix burns rather than explodes like the 2/1 ratio Rod Stevenson England |
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Rod Stevenson wrote:
Can anyone help with a Chemistry question? I understand that the Shuttle engines burn hydrogen/oxygen in a ratio of 3/1. What is the equation for this reaction? I teach high school chemistry and quote the equation 2H2 + O2 -- 2H2O. e.g ratio of 2/1. I assume the 3/1 ratio means that the fuel mix burns rather than explodes like the 2/1 ratio Nope. 2:1 will burn, not explode in a rocket engine. 3:1 (I diddn't think it was that high) is somewhat better for use in rockets, as it provides a bit higher thrust per unit of weight of fuel. (Called ISP.) |
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"Rod Stevenson" wrote in
: Can anyone help with a Chemistry question? I understand that the Shuttle engines burn hydrogen/oxygen in a ratio of 3/1. What is the equation for this reaction? I teach high school chemistry and quote the equation 2H2 + O2 -- 2H2O. e.g ratio of 2/1. I assume the 3/1 ratio means that the fuel mix burns rather than explodes like the 2/1 ratio Rod Stevenson England The SSME runs at a oxidiser/fuel ratio of 6:1 (by mass) By molar ratio as your figures are, this is a 3/1 Hydrogen to Oxygen Why do this? The burn is a bit cooler and totally non-oxidising, making all the engineering aspects easier. The average molecular mass of the exhaust is a bit lower, resulting in a faster exhaust velocity despite the lower temperature, thus resulting in a higher ISP. i.e. more impulse from the same mass of reactants. the equation: 2/1 ratio: 2H2 + O2 -- 2H2O mean molecular mass = 18 3/1 ratio: 3H2 + O2 -- 2H2O + H2 mean molecular mass = 12.7 (note that these are simplified. You will allways find traces of other forms such as H, OH, O3 etc in the exhaust. but in trace amounts only) The reaction at 3/1 ratio delivers the same energy from 38/36 of the mass as the 2/1 ratio, thus about 5% less energy-of-combustion per mass. But the much lighter exhaust molecular mass means about 15% higher ISP. As for burning/exploding nature of the mix.. A perfectly mixed gaseous form will indeed detonate. But in a typical rocket engine the mixture is not perfectly mixed, indeed a great part of the fuel is in the form of microdroplets of liquid rather than gas form. Rocket combustion is a highly turbulent burning of partially mixed materials. |
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Marvin wrote in :
3/1 ratio: 3H2 + O2 -- 2H2O + H2 mean molecular mass = 12.7 (note that these are simplified. You will allways find traces of other forms such as H, OH, O3 etc in the exhaust. but in trace amounts only) Minor additional note: within the atmosphere, you will also find nitrogen compounds in the exhaust. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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3/1 ratio:
3H2 + O2 -- 2H2O + H2 mean molecular mass = 12.7 What is the role of the lonely H2 ? Is it just dead weight that provides thrust just because it is accelerated by the burning of the active "ingredients" ? |
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In article , John Doe wrote:
3/1 ratio: 3H2 + O2 -- 2H2O + H2 mean molecular mass = 12.7 What is the role of the lonely H2 ? Is it just dead weight that provides thrust just because it is accelerated by the burning of the active "ingredients" ? Yep. There are two different processes going on here. If all you cared about was the amount of energy you got out of burning your fuel, you could go stoichiometric and have a 2/1 ratio. But we don't directly care about how hot the combusion chamber gets. A rocket nozzle is a fantastic machine for converting the heat energy in burning fuel to kinetic energy of molecules all moving in the same direction. You want the exhaust to be moving as fast as possible when it comes out of the nozzle, so you want the combustion chamber pressure and temperature as high as you can manage. But once you do that, you can still win by making the exhaust lighter- if you can lower the mass, the same amount of 'push' will make it go faster. Hence we leave that extra hydrogen in, since H2 weighs less than H2O. cheers, Steven -- "M-Theory is the unifying pachyderm of the five string theories." - Brian Greene, _The Elegant Universe_ |
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SIOL wrote:
But still, that hydrogen does not add up any energy to the equation, it just moves the average velocity of the molecules in the exhaust stream to a higher value. And since one has to carry excess H2 with the rocket, which means extra weight and air drag, I wonder where does the net benefit come from ? The important point is that the chamber temperature of a stoichiometric mixture will be very high, so high that the combustion is incomplete (due to dissociation). So you are actually not getting as much chemical energy out as you think. Adding hydrogen reduces the chamber temperature, which reduces dissociation. and increases the efficiency at which the available chemical energy is turned into heat. It turns out (doing the thermochemical calculations) that the optimal mixture ratio is somewhat fuel rich. The exact value depends on the details of the engine (pressure, size, expansion ratio). The high pressure of the SSME inhibits dissociation, which reduces the optimal H/O ratio. Lower temperature fuel/propellant combinations (for example, with hydrogen peroxide as the oxidizer) are optimal near the stoichiometric ratio. Paul |
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Steven Kasow wrote:
SNIP A rocket nozzle is a fantastic machine for converting the heat energy in burning fuel to kinetic energy of molecules all moving in the same direction. You want the exhaust to be moving as fast as possible when it comes out of the nozzle, so you want the combustion chamber pressure and temperature as high as you can manage. But once you do that, you can still win by making the exhaust lighter- if you can lower the mass, the same amount of 'push' will make it go faster. Hence we leave that extra hydrogen in, since H2 weighs less than H2O. But still, that hydrogen does not add up any energy to the equation, it just moves the average velocity of the molecules in the exhaust stream to a higher value. And since one has to carry excess H2 with the rocket, which means extra weight and air drag, I wonder where does the net benefit come from ? |
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"Paul F. Dietz" wrote:
SIOL wrote: But still, that hydrogen does not add up any energy to the equation, it just moves the average velocity of the molecules in the exhaust stream to a higher value. And since one has to carry excess H2 with the rocket, which means extra weight and air drag, I wonder where does the net benefit come from ? The important point is that the chamber temperature of a stoichiometric mixture will be very high, so high that the combustion is incomplete (due to dissociation). So you are actually not getting as much chemical energy out as you think. Adding hydrogen reduces the chamber temperature, which reduces dissociation. and increases the efficiency at which the available chemical energy is turned into heat. It turns out (doing the thermochemical calculations) that the optimal mixture ratio is somewhat fuel rich. The exact value depends on the details of the engine (pressure, size, expansion ratio). The high pressure of the SSME inhibits dissociation, which reduces the optimal H/O ratio. Lower temperature fuel/propellant combinations (for example, with hydrogen peroxide as the oxidizer) are optimal near the stoichiometric ratio. Paul Is the combustion chamber pressure of a SSME still the highest of any current liquid fuel rocket engine? -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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![]() "SIOL" And since one has to carry excess H2 with the rocket, which means extra weight and air drag, I wonder where does the net benefit come from ? The term that describes this is called specific impulse. The hydrogen atom is the lowest mass atom on the periodic table. All of your rocket fuels are going to produce the odd atom or molecule here or there. The specific impulse tells you the amount of go per unit of rocket juice. |
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