May 23, 2017 Volume 13 Issue 20
 

Designfax weekly eMagazine

Subscribe Today!
image of Designfax newsletter

Archives

View Archives

Partners

Manufacturing Center
Product Spotlight

Modern Applications News
Metalworking Ideas For
Today's Job Shops

Tooling and Production
Strategies for large
metalworking plants

Extreme Engineering:
Fuel trim on SpaceX rocket launch uses stock motors

Figure 1.

 

 

Amid tightening budgets, space agencies are increasingly looking to the commercial space sector to provide the launch vehicles of the future, and Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) is right there to help. The company builds high-reliability, economical launch vehicles like the Falcon 9 to carry a range of payloads into orbit (Figure 1). One way to control costs is by optimizing fuel burned during launch to minimize waste. The SpaceX team ensures top performance with the help of a special fuel-trim valve powered by robust, reliable servo motors from MICROMO (the FAULHABER Group).

Rockets like the Falcon 9 and Falcon 1 at SpaceX burn a fuel known as RP-1, a highly refined form of kerosene that must be mixed with oxygen in order to burn. On the launch vehicle, 4-in. pipes run from tanks of RP-1 and liquid oxygen (LOX) to combine prior to entering the combustion chamber.

The combustion chemistry of RP-1 is forgiving. The fuel won't burn without oxygen, but as long as oxygen is present, the two do not need to be combined in a precise ratio. "If the mixture is slightly lean, it is still going to burn decently," says Juerg Frefel, Avionics Engineer at SpaceX. The problem is that if the ratio of LOX to RP-1 varies from the optimum mix, either the oxygen will run out before the fuel or the fuel before the oxygen. Once combustion stops, the material left over becomes dead weight, turning from propellant to liability. To ensure this doesn't happen, the fuel-trim valve adjusts the mixture in real time.

Figure 2.

 

 

Optimizing fuel burn

The fuel-trim device consists of a servo motor-controlled butterfly valve. To achieve the proper speed and torque, the design incorporates a planetary gearbox for a roughly 151:1 reduction ratio, plus additional gearing internal to the unit. The team qualified the components with a significant safety margin to protect against common-mode failure. The shaft of the motor interfaces with the valve directly to make fine adjustments. "The basic mixture ratio is given by the sizing of the tubes, and a small amount of the flow of each one gets trimmed out," explains Frefel. "We only adjust a fraction of the whole fuel flow."

The Falcon 9 launch vehicle is a two-stage vehicle with a total of 10 engines, each with its own fuel-trim valve. To ensure the proper mix, the valve operates in a double closed loop based on feedback from a triplicate feedback mechanism. The first stage features nine engines that burn for approximately 3 minutes, and the second stage includes one engine that burns for approximately 7 minutes (Figure 2). Because of the duration of the burn for each stage, the control loops can actually run relatively slowly. "The whole valve doesn't necessarily need to be fast," says Frefel. "It's a closed-loop system, which means that the command to the valve is to go to a certain angle. The outer loop adjusts the angle of the valve, and the inner loop keeps the position steady in case it gets pushed around [by shock/vibration]."

Suriving extreme shock and vibration
Accuracy aside, the characteristics most applications require from servo motors tend to be high torque, high speed, or small size. In the case of the fuel-trim valve, the chief motor requirement was simple: They had to survive launch. The shock and vibration produced in the first stage, in particular, are extreme (Figure 3). "For the three minutes of the first stage, the engine is producing 100,000 lb of thrust," says Frefel. "It's quite a violent event and [the fuel-trim valve] is right next to the engine."

Figure 3.

 

 

When the engineering team set out to qualify components for the fuel-trim valve, vibration testing caused motor after motor to fail. "We have vibration fixtures and tables here where we can simulate the engine environment," says Frefel. "We basically went through a whole bunch of motors from different vendors to see which one would hold up." To minimize points of failure, they switched from brushed to brushless motors. "The main performance issue for us was could it survive the environment? That meant that the gearbox stayed on, the Hall-effect sensors weren't damaged, that nothing bad happened in the extreme environment. We just [kept looking] until we found the manufacturer of motors that survived." In the end, that manufacturer was MICROMO.

Rocket engines produce heat as well as vibration, but contrary to what someone might expect, thermal management does not pose a significant challenge in this application. Much of the heat is radiated and is reflected away. In addition, given the relatively brief duration of the stages, the unit's thermal mass makes it resistant to rapid temperature swings. "The actuator still has three to four pounds of mass, which means that in three minutes it doesn't heat up that dramatically," Frefel says. Interestingly, the thermal issue he does mention is low, not high temperatures. During the second stage, for example, the engines may fire only briefly. The vehicle can then coast for as long as 45 min. before a second burn takes place. By this point, the rocket is outside of the atmosphere, where temperatures can be quite low.

Figure 4.

 

 

Breaking new ground and making history
To control cost and production timelines, the SpaceX philosophy is to try to work with stock components whenever possible. Nothing special was done to the MICROMO motors to ruggedize them for the application; the design team simply ordered standard products. Leveraging MICROMO's express prototyping program, the SpaceX team was able to obtain samples in very short time frames. "They were either in stock in the United States or they had them within a few days," says Frefel. "They do a good job of having small volumes that can allow you to try out different gear ratios for different topologies. I was quite impressed by how easy it was."

As schedule and budgetary pressures cause NASA to increasingly lean toward commercial orbital transportation services, opportunity in this sector is on the rise. With the help of MICROMO, SpaceX delivers robust, reliable technology at an appealing price point.

Learn more about the brushless DC servo motors utilized by SpaceX, as well as additional available products, by visiting the product pages.

Have questions or need some help with micro motors? Contact MICROMO to learn more about custom engineering services and how their team can help you deliver innovation to market better and faster than ever.

Source: MICROMO

Published May 2017

Rate this article

[Extreme Engineering:
Fuel trim on SpaceX rocket launch uses stock motors]

Very interesting, with information I can use
Interesting, with information I may use
Interesting, but not applicable to my operation
Not interesting or inaccurate

E-mail Address (required):

Comments:


Type the number:



Copyright © 2017 by Nelson Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction Prohibited.
View our terms of use and privacy policy