Initial Operation and Shakedown of the Nuclear Thermal Rocket Element Environmental Simulator (NTREES)
Author(s) -
William Emrich
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
49th aiaa/asme/sae/asee joint propulsion conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2014-3723
Subject(s) - shakedown , rocket (weapon) , simulation , computer science , thermal , aerospace engineering , nuclear engineering , finite element method , aeronautics , environmental science , engineering , physics , meteorology , structural engineering
To support the on-going nuclear thermal propulsion effort, a state-of-the-art non nuclear experimental test setup has been constructed to evaluate the performance characteristics of candidate fuel element materials and geometries in representative environments. The facility to perform this testing is referred to as the Nuclear Thermal Rocket Element Environment Simulator (NTREES). This device can simulate the environmental conditions (minus the radiation) to which nuclear rocket fuel components will be subjected during reactor operation. Prototypical fuel elements mounted in the simulator are inductively heated in such a manner so as to accurately reproduce the temperatures and heat fluxes which would normally occur as a result of nuclear fission in addition to being exposed to flowing hydrogen. Recent upgrades to NTREES now allow power levels 24 times greater than those achievable in the previous facility configuration. This higher power operation will allow near prototypical power densities and flows to finally be achieved in most prototypical fuel elements.
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