NASA TESTS 3D-PRINTED ROCKET ENGINE PARTS

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WASHINGTON (TIP): Nasa has successfully tested the most complex rocket engine parts ever designed by the agency and created by 3D printing, pushing the limits of the technology. The advance at Nasa’s Marshall Space Flight Centre in Huntsville, Alabama shows just how the 3D printing technology could potentially revolutionize how the agency makes use of additive manufacturing in rocket design.

Nasa engineers pushed the limits of the technology by designing a rocket engine injector — a complex part that sends propellant into the engine — with design features that took advantage of 3D printing. To make the parts, the design was entered into the 3D printer’s computer. The printer then built each part by layering metal powder and laser-fusing it together, a process known as selective laser melting.

The additive manufacturing process allowed rocket designers to create an injector with 40 individual spray elements, all printed as a single component rather than manufactured individually. The part was similar in size to injectors that power small rocket engines and similar in design to injectors for large engines, such as the RS-25 engine that will power Nasa’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, the heavy-lift, exploration class rocket under development to take humans beyond Earth’s orbit and to Mars.

“We wanted to go a step beyond just testing an injector and demonstrate how 3D printing could revolutionise rocket designs for increased system performance,” said Chris Singer, director of Marshall’s Engineering Directorate. “The parts performed exceptionally well during the tests,” said Singer. Using traditional manufacturing methods, 163 individual parts would be made and then assembled.

But with 3D printing technology, only two parts were required, saving time and money and allowing engineers to build parts that enhance rocket engine performance and are less prone to failure. Two rocket injectors were tested for five seconds each, producing 20,000 pounds of thrust. Designers created complex geometric flow patterns that allowed oxygen and hydrogen to swirl together before combusting at 1,400 pounds per square inch and temperatures up to 3,315 degrees celsius. Additive manufacturing not only helped engineers build and test a rocket injector with a unique design, but it also enabled them to test faster and smarter, Nasa said.

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