Prototyping (Tiny) Rocket Injectors

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2024
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    Today we're prototyping some rocket injectors for a monopropellant thruster that I'm building! The two types of injectors we are looking at are Showerhead and Impinging injectors, and analyze them under various pressures with the high speed camera.
    Videos mentioned in the intro:
    - BPS.space: • Building A 1000lbf Roc...
    - Xyla Foxlin: • ALL Carbon Fiber: My F...
    - Charlie Garcia: • Making a Rocket Motor ...
    - Project KegRocket: • Can you build a Liquid...
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    Timeline
    0:00 Intro
    1:30 The Plan
    1:55 The Background
    3:09 Thruster Details
    6:57 Injector test stand
    8:44 1mm Showerhead, Single
    9:13 1mm Impinging, Single
    11:10 0.2mm Showerhead, Single
    11:30 0.2mm Impinging, Single
    12:30 0.2mm Showerhead, Full
    13:16 0.2mm Impinging, Full
    14:40 Best injector?
    Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 607

  • @XMaster96DE
    @XMaster96DE Před 9 měsíci +23

    0:34 "I am not an engineer", But I just happen to have access to high precision 5-axis CNC machines and Metrology equipment.
    This alone kind of gives him such a huge advantage over all the others he has listed.

  • @BPSspace
    @BPSspace Před 9 měsíci +221

    I could not possibly be more excited for a project! Great work on this so far, and man that high speed footage is beautiful. Also LMAO 0:35 if you don't qualify as an engineer, I'm not sure who does

    • @starshiphopper7044
      @starshiphopper7044 Před 9 měsíci +4

      You

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +30

      🥰🥰🥰

    • @multidiamanthunter
      @multidiamanthunter Před 9 měsíci +5

      Im still sad you view hybrids that bad :( especially for European student groups it’s the best option - did you see e.g. the North rocket build by HyEnD. It set a new record earlier this year.
      Hybrids have their flaws but also some really good points in favour especially in terms of safety.

    • @kineow
      @kineow Před 9 měsíci +1

      We at Vaya Space will show to the world very soon how amazing hybrid rockets can be!

  • @scottgauer7299
    @scottgauer7299 Před 9 měsíci +91

    Hi! I've worked on both monoprop peroxide engines and biprop combustion engines. For monoprop, you do not need atomization, and an atomization optimized injector will give you bad performance. Atomization is only needed when you need to vaporize your propellant (to ensure efficient combustion but irrelevant in a monoprop). All you need to do with your monoprop injector is make sure it's distributing the flow over the entire catalyst bed evenly (like a showerhead) and it has a large enough pressure drop to avoid feed system coupling (chugging).

    • @kenmercer2721
      @kenmercer2721 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Just what I was thinking. Impinging two reacting propellants makes sense whereas peroxide just needs good exposure to the catalyst.

    • @DisorderedArray
      @DisorderedArray Před 9 měsíci

      Also, for a monoprop, are impinging flows needed, or could the flow from one hole just impact on a baffle to achieve the same effect?

    • @scottgauer7299
      @scottgauer7299 Před 9 měsíci +4

      No impinging flows at all. The best monoprop thrusters use just a showerhead with axial flow

  • @CopenhagenSuborbitals
    @CopenhagenSuborbitals Před 9 měsíci +126

    Nice work and amazing footage! 🚀 Great example of the intricacies of injector geometry and associated effects.

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +19

      Love what y'all are doing! Should have mentioned you in the intro and totally overlooked it. Been following your project for a long time now, what you're doing is amazing. And you have some very cool videos on injectors 😎

    • @CopenhagenSuborbitals
      @CopenhagenSuborbitals Před 9 měsíci +9

      @@BreakingTaps Wow, thanks, the admiration goes both ways! 😊

  • @LuizHenryBR
    @LuizHenryBR Před 9 měsíci +181

    Yes friends, I feel blessed to find this channel

    • @omjagdeesh8731
      @omjagdeesh8731 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Same

    • @raptorsean1464
      @raptorsean1464 Před 6 měsíci +2

      This this is basically what I just commented on the last video of his I watched. This is now my third video in quick succession. The first one was the micro spheres on micro electronics and tape, and the second one was the ion blaster. If you haven't seen those, go check them out. They're absolutely fascinating.

  • @mmmmm49513
    @mmmmm49513 Před 9 měsíci +310

    Aerospace engineer here. Love this channel. Always a cool topic.
    I was terrified at the beginning of the video when you said that you were going to build a monopropellant rocket. I though that meant using high percentage hydrogen peroxide and it’s pretty nasty. The lower percentage stuff is lot safer so I’m glad you went that route.
    That said, make sure you read up on proper storage. I remember reading a story in my textbook about a lab technician at Purdue not properly venting a container of hydrogen peroxide. Since it’s constantly decomposing it can build pressure before “violently decomposing” which will destroy the pressure vessel and shoot shrapnel everywhere.
    I’m sure you already know this. But the only other thing I’ll say is make sure you build your combustion chamber out of a ductile material like aluminum. That way if it explodes for whatever reason you also don’t send dangerous shrapnel everywhere 😂.

    • @Bobbias
      @Bobbias Před 9 měsíci +13

      Yeah, I've seen what it looks like when forces are enough to literally shatter steel. Don't want to be anywhere nearby if that ever happens.

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +78

      Been storing it in a mini fridge, and burping it occasionally to relieve pressure (if any) 🙂 I did see some pretty wild containers for the high test stuff, which have built in expanding bellows to accommodate the decomposition. Pretty scary stuff tbh! Even if I could find a vendor for higher percentages, not really sure I'd want to. Reading through Armadillo Space's archived dev blog is equal parts fascinating and terrifying 😅
      Interesting point about using a ductile material. I was actually planning the opposite, building it all out of stainless. But using a weaker material does make a lot of sense. Will think about that, and also see what kinds of pressures the electric pump feed generates.
      I do plan to "fire" it only inside a safe enclosure. Will probably weld up a steel box and surround it with bricks and such. I dont have a lot of background in energetic stuff, so planning to be suuuuper cautious and extra safe :)

    • @mmmmm49513
      @mmmmm49513 Před 9 měsíci +23

      It’s not about strength! Use a good strong material!
      What I’m talking about is the how the material fails. Ductile materials like aluminum will pop open and vent an explosion. On the other hand more rigid materials like a hardened steel will fracture causing shrapnel (pipe bomb). The shrapnel would be the real thing to worry about.
      Hope that helps!

    • @MrLouvillian
      @MrLouvillian Před 9 měsíci +15

      @@mmmmm49513 another good approach is to have bolts designed to fail at X times MDC so that the nozzle blows off in the event of a chamber overpressure. Great place to use materials like brass (or even plastics) for the bolts

    • @JaredBrewerAerospace
      @JaredBrewerAerospace Před 9 měsíci +11

      Aero here too. I have a liquid 50lb biprop on my channel. I had that same feeling about the real deal High Test H2O2. Treat it like LOX. Get it and use it on the same day.
      Also, I forewarn that the pump will be the most difficult part of this adventure. Materials, seals, bearings, heat,... All of it. Rockets fundamentally don't have any moving parts.
      For your injectors the L/D ratio of your injector holes is more important than the diameter.
      While testing, check valves will help with consistency at startup due to their crack pressure.
      Welcome to boiling the ocean for troubleshooting and good luck!

  • @Conorsev
    @Conorsev Před 9 měsíci +4

    I have been making a peroxide rocket at home. I made my own 90% peroxide. I used a vacuum distilation set from Ali Express and a refrigeration vacum pump. Ended up being alot easier then people said and was a fun project. I'm using stainless steel nozels from a misting fan. They attomise great and come in heaps of sizes.

  • @JCisHere778
    @JCisHere778 Před 9 měsíci +245

    When filming stuff like droplets and jets, you could try putting some white acrylic (or something similar) behind your experiment as a diffuser and illuminating it from the back, in my experience that gives better contrast and introduces less heat. Very cool project :)

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +59

      Will give that a shot next time! Getting good high speed footage with enough contrast was _super hard_

    • @1Happy_Singh
      @1Happy_Singh Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@BreakingTapsCan We Just Put A Metal Net Of Some Durable Material 😅???
      Or
      Can We Put Spraying System And Catalysing System In One Unit In Which The Sprayer Is A Cylindrical Structure Inside The Catalyser ???
      And Then We Angle The Nozzles Of Sprayer So That Tiny Water Droplets Are Formed ???

    • @ciaduck
      @ciaduck Před 9 měsíci +2

      This is a good idea. I've also seen really cool water-droplet photography using 2 colored lights at 90 degrees from each other.

    • @aaronmarkstaller
      @aaronmarkstaller Před 9 měsíci

      No black background and light from above or below

    • @aaronmarkstaller
      @aaronmarkstaller Před 9 měsíci

      Can use a reflector sheet to diffuse it, or diffuser cotton cloth

  • @masonedwards7920
    @masonedwards7920 Před 9 měsíci +64

    It looks like the next step in testing will be to build a better supply for your pressurized liquid. You’re getting a lot of air in your “propellant”. I think a piston pressurized with air on one side would work better. That way you can bleed it.
    Great video. I’ve been thinking about doing something like this for a while. I look forward to seeing what you come up with.

    • @treeman10
      @treeman10 Před 9 měsíci +4

      He also said he plans on using an electric pump, not pressurized air, so they should yield better results

    • @aaronmarkstaller
      @aaronmarkstaller Před 9 měsíci +1

      Or a balloon sac. Keeps liquids and gasses separate. Very low friction

    • @darkwater72
      @darkwater72 Před 6 měsíci

      Well now. Using a "piston" driven by air, instead of redesigning the airstream, is one of those "quietly brilliant" solutions.
      It has all the best qualities:
      1) Simple to manufacture using tools you already possess.
      2) Does not REQUIRE (and I stress the word "require") redesign of any of existing components.
      3) does not REQUIRE changing the design or principles of any other part of the system.
      At this stage, all you are trying to do is drive the propellant through the atomizer at the required rate.
      I have seen teams disappear down rabbit holes of ever more "brilliant" designs requiring ever more complicated and time consuming machining which, for this purpose, was completely unnecessary. (Ask me how I know.😢)
      This is design and trial. The ONLY part that has to look like the final product is the part under test.

  • @WyrdieBeardie
    @WyrdieBeardie Před 9 měsíci +22

    I love how everything seems to "change" when you start to deal with the "very"... The very fast, the very small, the very high power, even the very low power, the very high vacuum...
    Suddenly, issues that previously could just be ignored suddenly become relevant or even dominating!
    This series is going to be very, very, interesting! 😃
    Thanks for sharing!

  • @charlvanniekerk8009
    @charlvanniekerk8009 Před 9 měsíci +38

    This is going to be an incredibly interesting build!!
    I cannot wait for the rest of the development.

  • @PickleBryne
    @PickleBryne Před 9 měsíci +2

    The visually striking difference between 0.2mm and 1mm holes is due to the squared growth of the area of a hole; the holes are 25 times smaller, which is more aligned with your perception of size than thinking of it as having a radius 5 times smaller.

  • @mayhemdiscordchaosohmy573
    @mayhemdiscordchaosohmy573 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I gotta give mad props to you because in your opening you point out basically, specifically & exactly what your gaps in your knowlage of this subject are!
    That said, to expand upon your opening "Why?" question...
    In other words... "Being too stupid to know it can't be done!"
    This was why I was hated in my chosen career, Jeweler! When asked how I did it when others said "Couldn't be done!", this was my response;
    "I dont know I guess I'm just too stupid to know it can't be done!"

  • @NonEuclideanTacoCannon
    @NonEuclideanTacoCannon Před 9 měsíci +4

    What is crazy to think about, is how much propellant flows through the injectors on a full scale rocket engine. For example, each Merlin engine on a Falcon 9 burns 350 pounds of propellent a second. 350 pounds of fuel and oxidizer, being forced through an injector array a the size of a dinner plate, every second.

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +4

      It's totally nuts! And they are cryogenic too!

  • @1495978707
    @1495978707 Před 9 měsíci +2

    8:00 you may want to consider using a mirror to film with the high speed camera, so that you don’t have to worry about damaging it, only the mirror

  • @luizgustavoschultzsenko5860
    @luizgustavoschultzsenko5860 Před 9 měsíci +17

    You can use an Agricultural sprayer nozzle for that, it atomizes very well, and you can choose the shape of the sprayer, from a triangle to a hollow cone, and the materials too, up to ceramic nozzles 😊

    • @TimeLapseRich
      @TimeLapseRich Před 9 měsíci +3

      Sprayer nozzles are used in may sizes and mist/spray patterns in the industrial food market. I uesd them in systems that sprayed baking pans mostly.

  • @ehdeesign
    @ehdeesign Před 9 měsíci +1

    Always impressed with your effort level & build quality. Couple things. 1. BI-Prop injectors use different sized holes AND impingement angles from inner-outer rows. 2. There is no benefit of impingement for a mono-prop. Impingement is for mixing fuel and oxidizer for more efficient combustion. With a monoprop, the catalyst releases the oxidizer stored in the fuel.
    3. Hybrids have thier place in propulsion, there is not a one tech solution in the rocket-world. There are always trade-offs.

  • @ungoodwoodworker
    @ungoodwoodworker Před 9 měsíci +1

    The low fps camera footage is so great. With those small holes you might need to change the name of the channel to breaking end mills.

  • @Vi_Renders
    @Vi_Renders Před 9 měsíci +5

    0:34 "I am not an engineer" then why do I hear Team Fortress 2 music every time you're in frame?🧐

  • @BlackFoxLovesYou
    @BlackFoxLovesYou Před 9 měsíci

    Fantastic video! This was amazing!

  • @lewismassie
    @lewismassie Před 9 měsíci +3

    This might be some of the best injector plate footage out there. I've seen animations for the doublet impinging injectors, but to see them really happening is very cool.
    If you have the free time I'd love to see some exploration of some of the other injector designs

  • @OtherWorldExplorers
    @OtherWorldExplorers Před 9 měsíci +3

    Not to be a snob
    But according to This Old Tony...
    When a machinist is pointing at something you need to point with something technical.
    In other words when you were pointing at your 3D printed model of the rocket. You should have used the back end of a Mitutoyo digital calipers, or a ruler that measures down to tenths...
    All joking aside, I'm very excited to see where this is going.
    Rockets are cool!

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Or a sharpie marker that teleports through time throughout the video 😁

    • @OtherWorldExplorers
      @OtherWorldExplorers Před 9 měsíci

      @@BreakingTaps Touché`!!
      Score is one nothing your favor :)

  • @jan_the_man
    @jan_the_man Před 9 měsíci

    It's great to see your channel getting more into rocketry stuff. We do, of course, have a lot of very high quality DIY rocketry content on CZcams, but your machinery experience and tools shows this from a completely different view. Would love to see more of this!

  • @SarahKchannel
    @SarahKchannel Před 9 měsíci +2

    my gut tells me, that attaching a ultrasonic transducer to the nozzle plate could help disperse the liquid even better. Also it could help in cases where individual nozzles plug.
    Thats just my instinct, never seen it, never tried it.

  • @racerex340
    @racerex340 Před 6 měsíci +1

    A little late to the party, but you can (somewhat safely) distill 35% H₂O₂ up well over 90% using a vacuum still and a heat source. Even a 100W light bulb is enough heat to distill with a decent vacuum, although I found that IR heat lamps for reptile cages worked perfectly and didn't also blind me while distilling. Just make sure you have a very clean vented stainless or aluminum container to store the HTP in after distillation and keep it cool and out of the sun. 90% H2O2 and most plastics are a bad day. You don't have to distill very much to have fun, I used to get 55 gallon drums of 50% and distill a gallon or two at a time and I always tried to use it all the same day.

  • @Engineerd3d
    @Engineerd3d Před 9 měsíci +16

    You should look at diesel injectors in this case for inspiration. These are designed to aromize fluid to a very fine degree and their tip design is very well studied and researched.

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +5

      Will take a look!

    • @42468
      @42468 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@BreakingTaps from my experience, two things might be worth trying from the diesel world: pintle-style injectors (which can be turned on a lathe-no microdrilling) and voice-coil based injection (where a vibrating membrane is used as a pump and to break up jets into a steady stream of droplets).

    • @Elitesniper257
      @Elitesniper257 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I’d also take a look at using automotive fuel injectors and components. If you want a full system it’s going to be easier as well since it lower pressure and components are easier to get.

  • @randomname4726
    @randomname4726 Před 9 měsíci +17

    Awesome series. You've finally convinced me to buy Nebula on payday. I love watching your channel, but it makes me feel very unaccomplished, lol.
    I used to make candy motors a long time ago before i had kids, i really must get back into it. Time to find a lathe.

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +9

      Hah, I feel the same way when I watch other creators on YT like Shane at StuffMadeHere or Joe at BPS 😅 Like how tf do those guys get so much awesome work done?! The struggle is real🙂

  • @undeadarmy19
    @undeadarmy19 Před 9 měsíci +1

    The size difference between 1mm and .2mm is only about 5x smaller in diameter, but its about 24x smaller in area, that's why it looks SO much smaller.

  • @tireballastserviceofflorid7771
    @tireballastserviceofflorid7771 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Cool project my friend One suggestion I would highly recommend it play more with pressures. Think about fuel injection. Old stuff like the early 70s used 30psi stuff. My 6.4 diesel uses 28,000 psi. The more pressure the better the spray. Really below 100psi I don't think you will ever get reliable atomization. And I do think you will find better atomized peroxide will relase more energy. Each droplet will have a surface tension and will be spinning. Theoretically it will give better contact to the catalyst. And for nozzle testing try a bigger tank to give you more time to study the spray. Anyway will be really cool to see how it progresses.

  • @NoblePineapples
    @NoblePineapples Před 9 měsíci

    This is insanely cool and I am all for it. Absolutely love learning about anything aerospace related.

  • @ErikBongers
    @ErikBongers Před 9 měsíci +3

    Great project! We'll be following along too! The kids are loving this! No, Pluto, let go, that's not a new toy, that's a bottle of hydrazine...

  • @GerinoMorn
    @GerinoMorn Před 9 měsíci +3

    Now, I'm also not a rocket scientist, but if I wanted to do a monopropellant rocket I'd probably not worry that much about injection, and just have series of fine silver(ed) meshes to pump peroxide through. Possibly by using the pressure increasing due to boiling to push peroxide through finer and finer catalyst meshes/sieves it can create sort of feedback loop...

  • @Amberlynn_Reid
    @Amberlynn_Reid Před 9 měsíci +3

    Well done making a shower head

  • @almosthuman4457
    @almosthuman4457 Před 9 měsíci +1

    that's some great highspeed footage. rockets are fun, I'm here for it.

  • @forrestglenn2520
    @forrestglenn2520 Před 9 měsíci

    YESS! I'm very excited to see you doing rocketry!

  • @honkabooly
    @honkabooly Před 9 měsíci

    Great stuff! Facinating

  • @DJSammy69.
    @DJSammy69. Před 9 měsíci

    Amazing footage!

  • @AstroCharlie
    @AstroCharlie Před 9 měsíci

    This is some of the best injector footage I've seen! Super cool video and I'm excited to see how this turns out!

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci

      Thanks Charlie! And appreciate all the help you've given so far! 🥰🥰🥰

  • @t.josephnkansah-mahaney7961
    @t.josephnkansah-mahaney7961 Před 9 měsíci

    Wow! Metal in and part out! Nice!

  • @davidcora2751
    @davidcora2751 Před 9 měsíci

    Awesome! Thanks!

  • @ExcessiveOverkill
    @ExcessiveOverkill Před 9 měsíci +1

    I have been working on a similar project only with goal being parallel extremely laminar streams. I built a much larger fuel tank I could pressurize that prevented air from mixing with the fuel. I used cam lock fittings so it’s easy to refuel.
    I also found smaller holes are way way better for getting good streams. I started with .003” sapphire orifices but found that the .1mm PCB drills on Amazon also work quite well. They are also super cheap and more resilient than i expected. Adding a super fine SS mesh filter screen is also a must since any small particles will clog the nozzles. I tried polypropylene filter fabric but the tiny fibers can come loose and cause clogs themselves.

    • @joelstienlet1641
      @joelstienlet1641 Před 9 měsíci

      In what material(s) have you drilled these 0.1mm holes, and how deep? Thank you.

  • @AndBar283
    @AndBar283 Před 9 měsíci

    As always, great work, magnificent content and big effort to deliver it. We appretiate it a lot.

  • @BadPracticeAutomation
    @BadPracticeAutomation Před 9 měsíci

    This may be my favorite channel on the entirety of CZcams. I love this.

  • @C-M-E
    @C-M-E Před měsícem

    Patently late to the party and probably way past useful at this stage, but I'm going to post it for legacy use. Some years ago, I was rebuilding a jet engine from NOS parts and got held up by the fuel nozzle. Operating principle vs rockets is a bit different, but I had an absolute ball once I figured out the geometry of the nozzle ports. With jet fuel/air-breathing combustibles, having a hollow cone nozzle that converts mass high pressure fuel flow it truly atomised spray is highly desirable, so I spent a few months trying alternatives. In concert with 2400psi repurposed pump and hardened steel nozzles, I found great success a converging .375" input to .00393" singular exit with either a taper cut in the input flow to 0 or 15* flare cut around the nozzle exit produced Beautiful hollow conical spray patterns.
    If one were so inclined, adding a secondary channel directly into the conical spray pattern would be an ideal route to introducing an oxidiser component. Now with a relatively small rocket, you probably wouldn't need the full 2400psi fuel pump, as for my use case, I was injecting into a 300psi airstream and had use for the spray pattern to overcome some of the restricted pattern that would result. In testing at atmospheric pressure, the nozzle would produce a roughly 240cm wide cone at the max cross section, but with added air pressure, about 215mm to perfectly flow inside a combustion liner.

  • @cwbh10
    @cwbh10 Před 9 měsíci

    Another aerospace guy here working on a pretty cool engine at work (albeit the electronics) and this is almost cooler than that. Awesome stuff dude, can’t wait to see where it goes just always remember to take safety 1st!

  • @bearnaff9387
    @bearnaff9387 Před 9 měsíci

    Watching your video I was reminded of two names - Richard P. Speck of Micro-Space and Dr. Adam London of Astra. Both are/were professional aerospace providers (We sadly lost Speck around 2010) with maverick outlooks.
    Speck ran a successful(!) aerospace company with some of the most gonzo engineering I've ever seen. His low pressure liquid-fueled motors used unconventional materials like fiberglass and resin, and his design for a minimalist lunar launch platform used angle aluminium framing and medical rubber tubing in the shock-absorption system. It was terrifying when compared to more conventional design, but when I met him he also had more than a few of his commercial launches (sounding rockets for the weather service) at hand to show that the principles were not nearly as insane as they looked. He was the kind of guy would makes world-record smallest/lightest orbiters in Kerbal Space Program, but did it in real life.
    Dr. London is an MIT grad who founded Asta. His post-grad work isn't nothing, but it's what he did at MIT that really made his name. The interest at the time was in micro-rocketry systems. Some principles of semiconductor MEMS design could be adapted to handling combustibles and could theoretically be used for ultra-small probes or station keeping for satellites.
    The top of the line at the time was a solid-fuel array on a chip. Essentially, it was a bunch of explosive wells piercing a conductive sandwich with traces to allow specific wells to be detonated at will. The wells were separated enough to prevent chain firing. It was a good way to store a small amount of delta-v for long periods of time without worrying about the vagaries of pumps and the behavior of liquid fuels in microgravity. The downside was that it was a chip die with tiny firecrackers in it. The delta-v budget sucked, especially compared to its mass.
    When Dr. London did his work, a MEMS pressure pump had recently become availble. So, he decided to see if he could use semiconductor tech to make a MEMS-scale rocket nozzle. It was cool AF. It looked like a little almost-2D bell nozzle made of layered metal and was _tiny_. I have to assume it didn't work because Astra doesn't mention it, and there are a tremendous number of applications for a chip-scale turbopumped liquid-fueled engine. There were discussions of building orbiters with the mass of a small car that could deliver 13-oz payloads to LEO and the linke, it was wild.
    Even though Speck is presumably designing sounding rockets in heaven (one of his non-commercial sponsors was a Baptist church!), we still have Dr. London. You might consider reaching out, or not. Either way, you're doing something cool and have cool peers.

  • @joetaylor486
    @joetaylor486 Před 9 měsíci

    This was a fascinating video for me. I have heard of impingement injection nozzles in relation to rocketry for decades but have never had a clear understanding of their function. Well, until now. Thanks.

  • @dirttdude
    @dirttdude Před 9 měsíci +2

    i got my first model rocket when i was 8, by the time i was 10 i was building multi stage giant rockets with D cell solid fuel engines, when i was 14 i started tinkering with my own solid fuel engines and within a couple of weeks the FAA, ATF, the cops and my parents were sitting at the dining room table discussing how i'll never be playing with rockets again and some of the things that will happen if i do and they took all my stuff

  • @the_normal_guy9308
    @the_normal_guy9308 Před 9 měsíci +2

    What about a pintle injector? It should be easier to tune and throttle.

  • @HM-Projects
    @HM-Projects Před 9 měsíci +3

    Hah this is going to be an exciting series. I haven't dabbled in rocket making after I got grounded in high school due to a candy accident You fellas are making me interested again 🤣

  • @npip99
    @npip99 Před 9 měsíci

    9:58, remember to not consider 0.2 vs 1, but actually consider 1/25 and 1. Because you have to square it. A 0.2mm hole is 25 times smaller than a 1mm hole.

  • @vaporizer82
    @vaporizer82 Před 9 měsíci

    "I am not an engineer"
    knows more than most engineers I work with.

  • @KallePihlajasaari
    @KallePihlajasaari Před 9 měsíci +1

    Great project.
    You will probably run into pump cavitation at some point.
    You may get better results if you ignore the nozzle plate and simply fill all your sections with catalyst bed.
    Round disks of silver (plated) mesh filling the whole cavity probably easiest.
    Look at what the H2O2 tip jet helicopters and jet packs have done, a lot of the hard work has been done for you.
    Your impinging jets were beautiful but somewhat overkill for a mono-propelat that has to pass through a catalyst bed afterwards.

  • @Zanthum
    @Zanthum Před 9 měsíci +17

    High test peroxide also really doesn't like organic materials. I think it was the Germans that had an aircraft that ran on high test peroxide and several times the pilots had to be removed from the vehicle with a hose and a mop.

    • @Ziraya0
      @Ziraya0 Před 9 měsíci +1

      You'd think they would have gone back a stage in the project after the first pilot

    • @zephdef1781
      @zephdef1781 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Holy hyperbole batman. Any sources for this? Just some casual skimming and I found 1 notable fatality in relation to T-Stoff and nothing even remotely close to " cleaning up pilots with hose and mop"

    • @jb76489
      @jb76489 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Ziraya0it’s hard to bog wrong betting on the incompetence of Germans

    • @alexwelles3683
      @alexwelles3683 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@zephdef1781 I don't clearly remember any incidents that are that bad, but look into Me 163 rocket plane incidents. It ran on some nasty stuff, including high test peroxide iirc

  • @chrisjenkins9978
    @chrisjenkins9978 Před měsícem

    How about an angled deflector baffle right after the nozzle holes? The streams would hit the baffle and scatter in different directions like water hitting a flat surface at different angles.

  • @julianlauterfeld6273
    @julianlauterfeld6273 Před 9 měsíci

    Love the footage 😮😊

  • @KegRocket
    @KegRocket Před 9 měsíci

    Nice work! Keep this up and we're going to need you to build an impinger for the KegRocket!

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +1

      I will absolutely and happily make any parts you need for the KegRocket! 🤩

  • @fredrikfarkas
    @fredrikfarkas Před 9 měsíci +1

    Novice rocketeer, but experienced graffiti guy here. What about mimicing spray paint nozzles? Like one nozzle into a tube of catalyst. And combining many to an array?

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201 Před 9 měsíci

    Very well done.

  • @iemozzomei
    @iemozzomei Před 9 měsíci +1

    Interesting you decided to go for an injector plate for the mesh bed version. The papers I was digging through on the topic usually just started blasting it in liquid with the occasional distributor plate to prevent hotspots.
    I'm really curious to see how misted peroxide will interact with catalyst bed now haha.
    Thanks for sharing!

  • @PROSCO_in_Space
    @PROSCO_in_Space Před 9 měsíci

    Hey, enjoyed the vid. I have worked with HTP and here are some advices. I recommend to use showerhead injector for the catalyst bed and design the orifices so that you would have a pressure drop across the injector about 20% of your cat bed pressure. Use transverse injector for the fuel injection. You would need enough chamber length and pressure for the autoignition of the fuel.

  • @johnhosky2931
    @johnhosky2931 Před 5 měsíci

    You should look at the nozzle on standard garden hose sprayer. One of the settings in those little 6 position ones is usually a mister that atomizes the water quite well. I wonder how that one functions.

  • @hamiltonjames4
    @hamiltonjames4 Před 9 měsíci

    i love nebula it supports all my favourite channels

  • @Bigman74066
    @Bigman74066 Před 9 měsíci

    It always amazes me how well a simple plant spray bottle atomizes the water. I don't really know how the atomizer works, but it looks like a good place to start(?)

  • @WRRocket9999
    @WRRocket9999 Před 9 měsíci

    If you increase the pressure drop across the injector, it will even out the flow rate through your injector elements. In your case this will probably mean you will need a larger diameter feed line for your injector feed or reduce your hole size.
    This pressure drop through the injector will also help you significantly when you actually go to run your engine. Your pressure drop is essentially your safety margin. If you have a combustion pressure excursion and your pressure drop is too low it will cause your combustion pressure to exceed your injection pressure which will stop or even reverse your propellant flow. In practice this will result in whats called pogo or chugging instability because it causes a low frequency oscillation of combustion. As the flow slows down from the high pressure, then speeds up again as combustion slows and the pressure drops back down and keeps repeating this cycle.
    I've done some work with 90% peroxide, and it is indeed its own special animal.

  • @Flare1107
    @Flare1107 Před 9 měsíci

    So I wanted to try building a monopropellant engine using a modified Ranque-Hilsch vortex tube. The design was to run the injector partially reacted into the offset intake side port, and use a catalyst mesh wrapped around an adjustable, perforated, "cold return" tube through the center of the body. The "cold" air is redirected 180 degrees back over the body, and both hot and cool air are used as thrust.

  • @alexandregb566
    @alexandregb566 Před 9 měsíci

    Imagine the life of this man. "Oh boy, I'm so bored. Let's make a rocket engine to liven my day up a little". It's awsome.

  • @ENetArch
    @ENetArch Před 9 měsíci

    Looking forward to part 2

  • @beautifulsmall
    @beautifulsmall Před 9 měsíci

    0.2mm thats about the smallest mechanical via size before laser vias take over. Repairing my oil boiler , the nozel was amazing, 60 deg cone , three spiral jets. Beautifully made. You can dismantle them easily. £9 Danfoss. maybe some bits you could use. Fascinating as always. Nebula sounds worth a look.

  • @quakxy_dukx
    @quakxy_dukx Před 9 měsíci

    1:03 the irony of the dunning-kruger effect is that that graph isn’t actually representative of the the studies done by dunning and kruger at all. The so-calling “mt. stupid curve” is actually more similar to the results of the dunning-sanchez studies.

  • @raindropdreams8
    @raindropdreams8 Před 9 měsíci

    Dude, this is a full-on research data video. Good on you mate! Looking forward to the rest =)

  • @gsuberland
    @gsuberland Před 9 měsíci +2

    One option might be to mill channels into the rear of the injector plate to help increase the localised pressure around the holes, which should equalise the flow a bit better.

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +2

      Yeah I think you are right. Looking over the footage more while editing and it was really clear the "order" that the holes were pressurized. Making some features on the backside to distribute it better makes a lot of sense.

    • @gsuberland
      @gsuberland Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@BreakingTaps I wonder if length-matching the paths to the hole, almost like matching impedance on a PCB, might be a good option here. You'd probably also need symmetric angles on any forks to avoid uneven distribution. Something like pumping all the fluid into the center, hitting a conical detent to correct for flow nonuniformity caused by any burrs or geometry variations the fitting, then uniformly separated outward channels with some snaking to avoid length mismatch... seems like that would probably give you even flow to all your target nozzles.

  • @chrimony
    @chrimony Před 9 měsíci

    From the "Peak of Mount Stupid" to the "Valley of Despair". The horror ride of every DIYer.

  • @Mr6Sinner
    @Mr6Sinner Před 9 měsíci +1

    I dont think you need to bother with the showerhead injector. Atomization is only necessary for combustion; your propellant will immediately come back together once it gets into the catalyst.

  • @lumotroph
    @lumotroph Před 9 měsíci

    Wow. Just the best channel on CZcams

  • @joebanks1866
    @joebanks1866 Před 9 měsíci

    I like the channel, but this video is the best thing I've seen you do. Love love love this footage.

  • @captainscarlett1
    @captainscarlett1 Před 5 měsíci

    I wish I had the time and the money and the smarts to do stuff like this. Unfortunately I have none of these but I do enjoy living vicariously. Really fascinating stuff that I mostly understand. People like you enrich my life. I have pet cats, I try to enrich their lives by doing things they don't really understand but captures their attention. Same thing.

  • @Proud2bmodest
    @Proud2bmodest Před 9 měsíci

    The higher flow in the middle of the injector is because of the momentum of air pressing behind the fluid. Rather than putting the air source directly in the middle of the injector, it should have an indirect path such as being introduced to the side of the injector impinging on a solid surface to allow air pressure to build evenly behind injector.

  • @mikkelkirketerp4884
    @mikkelkirketerp4884 Před 9 měsíci

    For injector geometry, and ease of milling, could it perhaps be worth it to use a conical bit to make a shower head style injector? I could think of 3 solutions with this:
    1) the big end of the cone is on the inlet side, and small end on the outlet side.
    This could perhaps help create a lateral force for the liquid as it exits the orifice, which should break of the laminar flow.
    2) reversed, so small end on inlet and big end on outlet side. The more gradient pressure drop as opposed to a regular shower head hole, could perhaps help the stream to separate instead of starting laminar - a bit akin to a waveguide for a speaker. I’d assume a 60degree bit would be better for this case than a 110, as we’d most likely need a slow expansion for the liquid to actually expand.
    3) a combination, so drilled from both sides. This could combine both of the above mentioned potential effects.
    Looking forward to any feedback :)

  • @hu5116
    @hu5116 Před 9 měsíci

    I’ll chime in a second time since I had been contemplating use of H2O2 to test a new rocket engine design concept. I do not have personal experience with H2O2, but I have studied it more than many. From my research, it does not appear to be as dangerous as some make it out to be. However, it does need to be highly respected and it needs to be handled properly. This includes like some have said, don’t bottle it up in a closed container, make sure you have a sump for it to go if it were to leak, always be sure to use non decomposing materials for containers and anything that touches it, make sure everything is immaculate cleaned with stabilized distilled water before using it with H2O2, and make sure to use the proper recommended stabilizers to keep if from decomposing. And finally, like all rocket fuels and for that matter guns too, always assume they are loaded and assume they might go off at any time and take the appropriate precautions to guard against if they did. From what I have learned of it, if given a choice between liquid O2 (LOX) and H2O2, I have to admit I would use LOX. The reason being because LOX must be combined with a fuel to react, and this provides a safety wall against it combusting. H2O2 does not have this impediment to decomposing and only needs a “spark” (a decomposition site) to start it going. In that regard, it’s kind of like having sensitive solid rocket fuel. But with that fear mongering aside (in order to instill due respect), like I said, I don’t think it’s as dangerous as many think. I know of no cases where the Germans had an accident with it during V2 testing or tactical launches, and although there may have been a an occasional accident, the same can be said for residential natural gas explosions, except I don’t recall anyone dying in a H2O2 accident, but plenty have dies of natural gas explosions, or been electrocuted with electricity, etc., etc.

  • @Jack_Of_Some_Trades
    @Jack_Of_Some_Trades Před 9 měsíci

    @9:00 (1mm Showerhead High Pressure). THAT IS WICKED COOL. You're feeding so much air pressure into the system that the air exits WITH the fuel. I think the air is forming a sudo-solid center channel almost as if the pressure is somehow still high enough (despite it expanding and moving faster) that it forces the fuel to the walls of the drill hole where the air is relatively stationary. This might be making a cylindrical venturi tube which is why it's atomizing the fuel so damn well!
    @11:10 Contrast this to the 0.2mm where the air cannot make it through the drill hole since the viscosity of the fuel blocks the smaller hole. In this case the air pressure is more so acting as a piston on the back of the fuel forcing it through the holes.
    While you may be getting more fuel through with the smaller holes it just will not react as well as the better atomized fuel. If you could find the smallest size diameter hole that still has that boundary atomization you will have your best possible fuel injector. After that you would need to tackle how to maintain the larger volume of compressed air the fuel injector will need in order to completely inject/(eject) the fuel in the reservoir.
    @13:08 DUDE YOU CAN SEE THE HARMONIC OSCILATION. You just need to fine tune the reservoir size, feed line length, and plenum size to get it to work better!

  • @natep121
    @natep121 Před 9 měsíci

    Great footage! What high speed camera is that? Chronos?

  • @louisnoel3170
    @louisnoel3170 Před 9 měsíci

    Wait that nebula video sounds so good

  • @arkatub
    @arkatub Před 9 měsíci

    You should make catalyzing injectors by stacking up washers and silver screens, diameter of washers would get bigger towards outlet, it would allow you to experiment with the length/distance needed to catalyze the H2O2, you may need to pre-heat the catalist, you could use a heat gun.

  • @Chumka314
    @Chumka314 Před 9 měsíci +1

    love your videos

  • @psychosis7325
    @psychosis7325 Před 9 měsíci

    Makes me love being Australian, 50% H2O2 is like $30 a gallon on Ebay here.... Mind you last one I ordered was shipped in an oversize reused box of a non hazardous chemical and had leaked causing me to have to track down a delivery driver, had all decomposed but was still not cool. Contacted supplier and they put in some new practices to ensure similar does not happen again. Kinda glad that come to me and not someone else that would of thought less of it.

  • @brandonsaffell4100
    @brandonsaffell4100 Před 9 měsíci

    In a past life i worked with some very very fancy showerhead spray nozzles. They used triangular holes to increase atomization.
    The juice probably isnt worth the squeeze for this project, but it might be interesting to investigate hole geometry.

  • @TheToric
    @TheToric Před 9 měsíci

    I would take issue with the statement that bipropelant is the most common rocket. For orbital boosters, maybye, but keep in mind that most payloads boosted into orbit have a ton of little manuvering thrusters that are all monoprop. For example, the dragon spacecraft launches on a booster with 10 bipropelant engines (9 first stage, 1 second stage), but the capsule has 18 draco engines for manuvering and 8 superdracos for LES, for a total of 29 monoprop thrusters. Other orbital systems have similar number of maneuvering engines.
    And solid rocket boosters, while not as popular for orbital and launch applications, are extremely popular for military applications, and are used for most military missiles, from ICBMs to air to air missiles. Im pretty sure that military stockpiles mean that SRBs are easily the most common type of rocket engine.

  • @glennback3105
    @glennback3105 Před 9 měsíci

    Great liked and subscribed. Next stop nebula 😊

  • @jmirodg7094
    @jmirodg7094 Před 9 měsíci

    You might try to look at swirl injector, you put a swirler (just angled surfaces) followed by a convergent section, the fluid will keep the rotation velocity on a much smaller diameter generating a nice attomization when exiting the hole.

  • @Synt4x
    @Synt4x Před 9 měsíci

    Enjoyed the intro, but not nessacary. I appreciate your interest in the sciences and your ability to share your experiences on this platform.

  • @gordon6029
    @gordon6029 Před 9 měsíci

    I can’t wait for the next instalment

  • @dennyatnotts
    @dennyatnotts Před 3 měsíci

    I love this sort of content. I live for the puzzle.
    I'm not sure about which is better, the shower or the doublet but I wonder about three points. I bet the ports have a bit of swarf stuck that would break out if you lightly chamfered the holes. I also suspect that 200um is still a bit big. You might consider either electroplating some material on or building an anvil with corresponding points to bulge the center of each port into a venturi geometry. Finally, I think that you need to make your water 'wetter'. The smallest amount of detergent with no flocculant would do that job. I have no idea what the surface tension of H2O2 or what it would do to the H2O2. Might be worth a try.

  • @elpiel
    @elpiel Před 9 měsíci +1

    Awesome video, can't wait to see the full project while it develops.
    Even cooler t-shirt! Are you using it for your projects? I'm interested to talk about Rust and space technologies 🦀🚀

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci +1

      I don't do much programming anymore tbh, but I try to use Rust for fun projects when I can! Sometimes python is easier for quick prototypes because there's a scientific library for everything, but Rust is just fun to work with (for some definition of the word "fun" when fighting the borrow checker 😅)

  • @wilgarcia1
    @wilgarcia1 Před 9 měsíci

    I have to wonder if anyone has tried using a modern fuel injector in these. They are really good at doing exactly this.

  • @robertschnobert9090
    @robertschnobert9090 Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @SeanHodgins
    @SeanHodgins Před 9 měsíci

    Is the introduction of air from the high pressure tests due to the air line in the tank? I'm sure the next step is to use a plunger in the tank to separate the air and propellent. Can't wait to see where this goes.

    • @BreakingTaps
      @BreakingTaps  Před 9 měsíci

      I think so yeah! For some of the later tests I "pre-purged" by adding a small amount of pressure until it was leaking out of the nozzles. That helped a lot, but I think there is still air trapped in the system. And at higher pressures I suspect the tank geometry let some of the shop air mix in as bubbles too.

  • @danoneill8751
    @danoneill8751 Před 9 měsíci

    Excellent.

  • @communistwaffle6517
    @communistwaffle6517 Před 9 měsíci

    This is a really cool project you're working on!! I was wondering how much theory was used in your design as I have a few point but I'm not sure what you've considered already.

  • @massriver
    @massriver Před 9 měsíci +1

    Interesting. Think spraying into high pressure would perform differently.