Wednesday, June 9, 2010

XCOR Tests Hydrogen Piston Pump





Private launch technology is presently taking of and lots of great work is been done.  This is one example of it.  The need for superior cryogenic pump technology has made XCOR a player in the component business and we have here the demonstration of a working liquid hydrogen pump using pistons.
Much has been said of the hydrogen economy but it all depended on the creation of superior cryogenic handling technology.  This is obviously a big step in the right direction.
XCOR is developing a true space plane concept able to land and lift off from a runway.

XCOR Aerospace and United Launch Alliance Announce Successful Hydrogen Piston Pump Tests

XCOR Engineer Mark Street adjusts a fitting on the hydrogen piston pump test apparatus.
June 8th, 2010, Mojave, CA, USA and Littleton, CO, USA:   XCOR Aerospace, the developer of the Lynx, a manned suborbital spacecraft and related technologies, and United Launch Alliance (ULA), the primary launch services provider to the US Government, announced the first successful demonstration of XCOR's long life, high performance piston pump technology with liquid hydrogen.

XCOR has been developing piston pumps for space applications for more than eight years as an alternative to turbopumps, demonstrating longer life and lower cost.  XCOR's piston pumps have other advantages including the ability to operate over a wide range of speeds and inlet conditions.  After XCOR performed risk reduction and demonstration projects in 2009 that validated high performance cryogenic (liquid oxygen and liquid nitrogen) piston pump operations, ULA asked XCOR if the pump technology could be extended to liquid hydrogen.  Implementing rapid prototyping techniques and working on a fixed price basis, XCOR developed a single piston work-horse test article and test bench, and then successfully tested the pump with hydrogen in less than four months.  Based on this success, ULA and XCOR have begun the next phase of the project to further mature the technology.


During the tests, the XCOR team of Chief Engineer Dan DeLong, Chief Test Engineer Doug Jones, Senior Engineer Mike Valant and Systems Engineer Mark Street, demonstrated successive rounds of pumping liquid hydrogen at conditions relevant to a flight type multi-cylinder pump.   Possible applications include pump-fed liquid hydrogen rocket engines for upper stages, on-orbit propellant transfer operations, and other cryogenic fluid management applications.  A unique capability demonstrated during the tests was the ability to pump through cavitation events when liquid hydrogenreturned to partial gaseous form, a sign of robustness of the design to handle anomalous events that would cause other high performance pump schemes to cease operations.



The XCOR hydrogen piston pump test apparatus.
ULA's Vice President of Business Development and Advanced Programs, Dr. George Sowers noted, "XCOR has demonstrated the beginnings of an important technology development path that has the promise to significantly improve the competitiveness of future ULAlaunch vehicles."

Frank Zegler, Senior Staff Engineer in ULA's Advanced Programs group, commented, "XCOR is doing things with piston pumps that no one else has done."

"ULA has taken a very innovative and commercially focused approach for future technology insertion into their long range product planning roadmap, and XCOR is very pleased to support the ULA team by further enhancing and extending our technology to their unique needs for lower cost launch vehicles, new on-orbit applications and capabilities, and future deep space exploration systems," said XCOR President and Founder Jeff Greason. 

XCOR Chief Operating Officer Andrew Nelson said, "ULA's use of our high performance, light weight cryogenic piston pump technology is very exciting and this effort is a demonstration of how a large and established aerospace company can effectively work with smaller, innovative New Space companies to improve the prime contractor's product lines while simultaneously helping to restore the second and third tier aerospace supplier base our country has lost over the last twenty years. We are very pleased and fortunate to have such a good long term partner in ULA."
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XCOR Aerospace is a California corporation located in Mojave, California. The company is in the business of developing and producing safe, reliable and reusable rocket powered vehicles, propulsion systems, advanced non-flammable composites and other enabling technologies for responsive private space flight, scientific missions, upper atmospheric research, and small satellite launch to low earth orbit. The Lynx is a piloted, two seat, fully reusable, liquid rocketpowered vehicle that takes off and lands horizontally.  The Lynx production models (designated Lynx Mark II) are designed to be robust, multi-commercial mission vehicles capable of flying to 100+ km in altitude up to four times per day.  XCOR's web address is: www.xcor.com

United Launch Alliance was formed in December 2006, and is a 50-50 joint venture owned by Lockheed Martin and TheBoeing Company.  ULA brings together two of the launch industry's most experienced and successful teams - Atlas and Delta - to provide reliable, cost-efficient space launch services for the U.S. government.  U.S. government launch customers include the Department of Defense, NASA, the National Reconnaissance Office and other organizations.ULA program management, engineering, test and mission support functions are headquartered in Denver, Colo. Manufacturing, assembly and integration operations are located at Decatur, Ala., Harlingen, Texas, and San Diego, Calif. Launch operations are located at CCAFS, Fla., and Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. For more information on the ULA joint venture, visit the ULA website at www.ulalaunch.com, or call the ULA Launch Hotline at 1-877-ULA-4321 (852-4321).

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