Deposit formation in hydrocarbon rocket fuels with an evaluation of a propane heat transfer correlation
Abstract
A high pressure fuel coking testing apparatus was designed and developed and was used to evaluate thermal decomposition limits and carbon decomposition rates in heated copper tubes for hydrocarbon fuels. A commercial propane (90% grade) and chemically pure (CP) propane were tested. Heat transfer to supercritical propane was evaluated at 136 atm, bulk fluid velocities of 6 to 30 m/s, and tube wall temperatures in the range of 422 to 811 K. A forced convection heat transfer correlation developed in a previous test effort verified a prediction of most of the experimental data within a + or - 30% range, with good agreement for the CP propane data. No significant differences were apparent in the predictions derived from the correlation when the carbon resistance was included with the film resistance. A post-test scanning electron microprobe analysis indicated occurrences of migration and interdiffusion of copper into the carbon deposit.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982STIN...8226611M
- Keywords:
-
- Deposits;
- Hydrocarbon Fuels;
- Propane;
- Rocket Propellants;
- Carbon;
- Copper;
- Heat Transfer;
- Thermal Decomposition;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer