Status of power generation experiments in the NASA Lewis closed-cycle MHD facility
Author(s) -
R. J. Sovie,
L. D. Nichols
Publication year - 1972
Publication title -
29th aerospace sciences meeting
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.1972-103
Subject(s) - magnetohydrodynamics , aerospace engineering , electricity generation , power (physics) , physics , computer science , engineering , plasma , nuclear physics , thermodynamics
In this paper the design and operation of the closed-cycle MHD facility is discussed and results obtained in recent experiments are presented. The main components of the facility are a compressor, recuperative heat exchanger (preheater), heater, nozzle, MHD channel with 28 pairs of thoriated tungsten electrodes, cesium condenser, and an argon cooler. The heater can supply 1.1 MW of thermal power to a 2.27 kg/sec gas stream. The facility has been operated at temperatures up to 2100 K with a cesium-seeded argon working fluid. At low magnetic field strengths (B = 0.2 T), the open circuit voltage, Hall voltage and short circuit current obtained are 90, 69, and 47 percent of the theoretical equilibrium values, respectively. The Hall voltage and short circuit current decrease sharply with increasing magnetic field strength, however. Comparison of these data with a wall and boundary layer leakage theory indicates that the generator has shorting paths in the Hall direction.
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