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Opening the Next Frontier
by Anthony Tate
Part 10: Prometheus would be proud of us.
In this section I describe a huge nuclear powered rocket
launcher. I will repeat and expand upon many of the points I
made above, because I don't want to throw cryptic acronyms
around. I want people to understand just how powerful we can
make this rocket if we decide to do it.
The effective use of nuclear power in space transportation
allows a paradigm shift in our thinking. All boosters which have
been built to date have been shackled by the low efficiency of
chemical fuels. Using chemicals it is possible to get off earth,
but only barely. Every gram of structure must be trimmed, exotic
materials and cutting-edge techniques are a necessity, and
safety margins must be as slim as we dare if success is to be
achieved.
Nuclear power changes all that. Nuclear is VASTLY more energetic
than chemical. We no longer must guard every gram of mass. Much
more "margin" can be included. Much more safety can be designed
into the machine.
Let's examine a large heavy lift booster. There are other kinds
of nuclear rockets we could build, but we desperately need a
heavy lift booster if we are to excite people, catch their
dreams, and actually do big stuff in space.
The most powerful booster America has built to date was the
Saturn V. The size and weight of the Saturn V are easily
accommodated by existing infrastructure.
Lets use the Saturn V as a "template" for a nuclear powered
heavy lift booster. We will make the launcher roughly the same
size, weight and power as the Saturn V, and let's see how the
performance compares.
The most important difference between our new booster and the
Saturn V is in the engines. The Saturn V used five massively
powerful F1 engines in the first stage, burning kerosene and
liquid oxygen. The mighty F1 produced 1.5 million pounds of
thrust. Despite its large size and power, the F1 was a very
"relaxed" design. It ran well inside the possible performance
envelope. The reason it did so was to increase reliability. This
is a sound design principle, so I will apply it to the new
launcher wherever possible.
For an engine, I will designate a Gaseous Core Nuclear Reactor
design, of the Nuclear Lightbulb sub variant. I like the gas core
design for a number of reasons, and the nuclear lightbulb
variant for several more.
To recap, the efficiency and power of the thruster is based on
the difference in temperature between the fissioning mass and
the reaction mass. If you run a solid core NTR much above 3000
C, it melts. This provides a firm "ceiling" on how efficient a
solid core reactor can be. A gas core design STARTS melted. In
addition, since all of the structure of the fuel mass is
dynamic, a gas cored reactor is inherently safer than a solid
core device. If a "hot spot" develops in a solid core, disaster
ensues. If a hot spot develops in a gas core, the hot spot
superheats and "puffs" itself out of existence. A gas core
reactor is expected to operate at temperatures of 25,000C. The
much higher temperature gradient makes the thruster inherently
more efficient.
Second, a solid core reactor has a "fixed" core, since it is
solid. A gas core reactor does not, and the radioactive fuel is
easily "sucked" out of the core and stored in a highly
non-critical state completely out of the engine! The fuel
storage system I propose is a mass of thick walled
boron-aluminum alloy tubing. As I said above, the fuel proper is
uranium hexafluoride gas. UF6 is mean stuff, but we have decades
of experience handling it in gaseous diffusion plants, and
common aluminum and standard seals are available which resist
attack from it. It is stoichiometric, fluorine is low
activation, and UF6 changes phase at moderate temperatures,
allowing it to be converted from high pressure gas to a solid
and back again using nothing fancier than gas cooling and
electrical heaters. This naturally makes dealing with the engine
easier.
In addition, the design of the gas core allows the addition and
removal of fuel "on the fly." The core can also have its density
varied by control of the vortex, which directly affects
criticality. Both of these elements allow very potent control
inputs to be applied to a gas core reactor which are very stable
and unaffected by the isotopic condition of the fuel mass.
Also, to repeat, due to the extremely high temperature gradient
in the motor, the main cooling of the fissioning mass is not
conductive but radiative, a mode which is inherently less
susceptible to perturbations. (Having no working fluid for
cooling means no material characteristics for the working fluid
must be considered.) This radiative cooling mechanism is what
allows the "lightbulb" system to work. The silica bulb just has
to be transparent enough to let the gigantic power output of the
fissioning core flow through, while keeping the radioactive
material of the core safely contained inside the thruster. No
radioactive materials leak out of the exhaust, it is completely
"clean."
Third, a gas cored reactor has several potential "scram" modes,
both fast and slow, and the speed of the reaction is easily
"throttled" by adding and removing fuel or by manipulating the
vortex. A 'scram' is an emergency shutdown, usually done in a
very fast way. For example: a gas cored reactor can be fast
scrammed by using a pressurized "shotgun" behind a weak window.
If the core exceeds the design parameters of the window, which
are to be slightly weaker than the silica "lightbulb," then the
"shotgun" blasts 150 or so kilos of boron/cadmium pellets into
the uranium gas, quenching the reaction immediately. A slightly
slower scram which is implemented totally differently is to vary
the gas jets in the core to instill a massive disturbance into
the fuel vortex. This disturbance would drastically reduce
criticality in the fission gas. A third scram mode, slightly
slower still, is to implement a high-speed vacuum removal of the
fuel mass into the storage system. Having three separate scram
modes, one of which is passively triggered, should instill
plenty of safety margin in the nuclear core of each thruster.
Extensive work was done on gas core reactors, and 25 years ago
several experimental designs were built and run successfully.
There were technical challenges, but nothing that seems
insurmountable or even especially difficult given our current
computer and material skills.
The engine I propose is this:
A Gas cored NTR using a silica lightbulb. The silica bulb is
cooled and pressure-balanced against the thrust chamber by high
pressure hydrogen gas. The cooling gas from the silica bulb is
used to power three turbopumps "borrowed" from the Space Shuttle
Main Engine. These pumps are run at a very relaxed 88 percent of
rated power at their maximum setting. The three pumps move 178
kilos of liquid hydrogen per second combined. Most of this is
sprayed into the thrust chamber. A portion of the liquid
hydrogen is forced into cooling channels for the thrust chamber
and expansion nozzle, where a portion of it is bled from
micropores to form a cooling gas layer. The gaseous hydrogen
that is not bled then flows down the silica lightbulb to cool
it, and the cycle finally goes into powering the turbopumps.
This engine produces 1,200,000 pounds of thrust, with an exhaust
velocity of 30,000 meters per second, from a thermal output of
approximately 80 gigawatts. This equates to an Isp of 3060
seconds. Several sources state that a gas core NTR can exceed
5000 seconds Isp, so 3060 is well inside the overall performance
envelope. The three turbopumps from the SSME are run at low
power levels, and even losing a pump allows the engine to
continue running as long as there is no damage to the nuclear
core. Lets assume this design is able to achieve a thrust to
weight ratio of ten to one, so the engine and all of its safety
systems, off-line fuel storage, etc, weighs 120,000 pounds. I
think we can build this engine easily for 60 tons.
We have the engine. Now to design the entire vehicle.
Since
we are using the Saturn V as our template, we will make the new
machine about the same weight, or six million pounds launch
weight. With our engines giving 1.2 million pounds of thrust, we
need at least five to get off the ground. But, since we have the
power of nuclear on our side, we will use seven engines instead
of five. Why seven? The most vulnerable moments of a rocket
launch are the first fifteen seconds after launch. If we have to
scram a motor in those fifteen seconds, having two extras is
very comforting. Engine failures further along the flight
profile are much easier to recover from, and having two spare
engines allows us to be very "chicken" on our criteria for
scramming a motor. We can shut one down even at one second after
launch if we need to with no risk of crashing the entire
vehicle. This further lowers the risk of nuclear power as a
means of getting off the earth.
With seven engines, we have a thrust of 8.4 million pounds
available. In addition, the turbopumps can "overthrottle" the
engines easily in dire straits. This gets more thrust at the
expense of less Isp.
Let's design the vehicle for a total DeltaV of 15 km per second.
This is very high for a LEO booster, but the reason for it is to
allow enough reaction mass to perform a powered descent. In
other words, this is a true spaceship, that flies up and then
can fly back down again.
The formula to calculate DeltaV from a rockets mass is:
DeltaV = c * ln(M0/M1).
'c' is exhaust velocity of the engines and equals 30,000 m/s.
'ln' is the natural log.
'M0' is the initial mass of the vehicle, and we have set this to
be 6 million pounds.
'M1' is the mass of the vehicle when it runs dry of reaction
mass.
The value of M1 is what we need to find, since we know we want a
total DeltaV of 15,000 m/s.
Doing a little simple math, we find we need 2,400,000 pounds of
reaction mass. Since we are using liquid hydrogen, we can now
calculate the size of the hydrogen tank needed, which is 15,200
cubic meters. This works out to be a whopping 20 meters in
diameter and 55 meters long!
We look at the Saturn V and find our new booster is going to be
quite plump compared to the sleek Saturn V, but we have no
choice if we want to use liquid hydrogen as reaction mass. Since
hydrogen is the best reaction mass physics allows, and is cheap,
plentiful, and we have decades of experience handling it, we
will use it.
A design height of 105 meters seems reasonable. We assign 15
meters to the engines, 55 meters for the hydrogen tank, 5 meters
for shielding and crew space, and a modular cargo area which is
30 meters high and 20 meters in diameter. This is enough cargo
space for a good sized office building!
How heavy is the rest of the vehicle? Well, we already decided
that the engines are going to weigh 120,000 pounds each, for a
total of 840,000 pounds. (To make a comparison, the entire
Saturn V, all three stages, engines and all, weighed a mere
414,000 pounds dry.)
Let's splurge here. With nuclear power, we have the power to
splurge. Let's use 760,000 pounds to build all of the structure
of the new booster. We use thicker and stronger metal, we use
extra layers of redundancy, we make it strong and safe and
reliable.
We have now used 2,400,000 pounds for reaction mass, 840,000
pounds for the engines, and 760,000 pounds for the rest of the
ship's dry structure. This adds up to 4,000,000 pounds, fully
built, fully fueled, ready to launch.
But we said at the beginning, the booster has a design launch
weight of 6,000,000 pounds! If it only weighs 4 million pounds
ready to launch, the rest must be cargo capacity.
This machine has a Low Earth Orbit cargo capacity of TWO MILLION
POUNDS.
It is fully reusable. We gave it enough fuel to fly back safely
from orbit.
It has MASSIVE redundancy and multiple levels of safety
mechanisms.
Its exhaust is completely clean: It is very difficult to make
hydrogen radioactive in a fission reactor. It basically can't
happen.
It flies to space with a thousand tons of cargo, and flies back
using some gentle aero-braking and its thrusters with another
thousand tons of cargo.
This means it has eight times the cargo capacity of the Saturn
V, which was not reusable at all. No longer will the Saturn V be
the mightiest American rocket. No more resting on our laurels.
With this sort of performance potential, can anyone argue that
NTR's are NOT the only sensible course for heavy lift boosters?
There are risks, of course, but careful design and the proper
launch site can easily mitigate those risks so that the huge
advantages of nuclear propulsion can be realized.
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Contents:
1: The Frontier Spirit
2: What went wrong.
3: Where do we go next?
4: So, why aren't we going?
5: Dealing with the Devil
6: A brief technical
interlude
7: So how good is Nuclear,
anyway?
8: Heat, temperature, and
cooling.
9: But isn't this dangerous?
10:
Prometheus would be proud of us.
11: Ok, that all sounds
nice, but this is just fantasy, right?
12: But isn't this just too
big?
13: But doesn't this thing
make nuclear waste?
14: Conclusions
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