How Do Airframe Stresses Change During Rocket Motor Ignition and Flight?

  • Thread starter Thread starter denverdoc
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Analysis Force
AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on the stresses experienced by a rocket's airframe during motor ignition and flight. Key points include the axial shear forces acting on the airframe due to the thrust of the motor, which can change as the rocket accelerates. The drag forces on the airframe become significant once the motor burns out, while inertia continues to affect the motor. The d'Alembert principle is highlighted as a method to analyze these forces by treating the rocket as a rigid body and accounting for the resultant acceleration. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for conducting a proper stress analysis in rocket design.
denverdoc
Messages
961
Reaction score
0
I'm trying to put together a proposal for a small amatuer rocket flight, and could use some assistance. This is not a terrorist strike aimed at your backyard, but flown under the auspices of the Triopli Rocket Association that provides safety guidelines and insurance to members in good standing.
See: http://www.tripoli.org/

My question has to do with the stresses between an external airframe and one or more enclosed motors that are attached to the skin of the airframe. Generally the configuration consists of an inner cylinder which is glovefit sized for the motor that is then glued into centering rings. In turn these annuli are glued to the inside of the airframe at varius stations.

This particular configuration is a bit different. But I believe the same principles apply.

The stresses would seem to vary. At full ignition, there would be a strong axial shear component equal to the thrust of the motor trying to tear loose and leave the airframe behind. Now my question is assuming that the airframe gets dragged along for the ride, is there any change in the net forces.

For one the drag of the vehicle is not felt by the motor(s) directly. This would then add to the shear forces exerted on the adhesive or mechanical attachments to the motor?

OTOH the airframe is developing velocity and so its inertia is helping to relieve the stress--I think but am not sure whether "jerk" is operative here--in other words--hit the motor with a sledge hammer, the shear forces are peak, but once it all starts to move, the same relative force is not as apt to tear things loose.

When the motor burns out, then another development: the drag forces become paramount on the af, while the inertia of the motor is unabated.

So another jerk?

Clearly my thinking on the subject is muddled, and any help is appreciated.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
You have hit on a real issue that you need to address to do a proper stress analysis. The key to getting it right is to realize the rocket is accelerating (or not, when it's still on the launch pad, or course).

The effect of the acceleration is to create a force (the so called d'Alembert force) on each part of the structure equal to -mass*acceleration.

When you include those forces, you will get the correct loads and stresses between the parts of the structure.

As a simple example, consider the rocket as a uniform tube of mass M with the motor attached to the base. In flight (ignoring gravity) the axial force in the tube will vary linearly, zero at the top and equal to the thrust at the bottom.

Hope that gets you thinking along the right lines.

If by "jerk" you mean the rate of change of acceleration, that's not important compared with the accleration itself.
 
That helps--am I right in thinking that d'Alembert's principle is equivalent to Newton's sixth corrolary which broadens inertial frames to include those subject to parallel constant acceleration(s)?

For instance, if you have a uniformly accelerating pickup truck with a box in the bed, how long does it take to hit the tailgate given a particular Mu and distance x from the tailgate?

One of course can do this conventionally, or introduce a virtual acceleration such that the truck is at rest and any free bodies are now subject to this acceleration--which leads to the solution immediately. Is this akin to what D'Alembert was doing?
 
Yes d'Alembert's principle is equivalent to Newton's laws of motion, it's just a convenient way of doing the accounting to include all the inertia effects correctly.

First you treat the complete rocket as a rigid body to find its accleration from the resultant force on the whole structure - e.g. accel = (thrust - drag - weight)/mass if it's going vertically upwards.

Then you apply fictitious forces of -mass*accel to each part individually (e.g. to the motor and the body).

You now have a balanced set of forces and you can forget about accelerations for the rest of the analysis.

For a general motion where the rocket has a linear acceleration, is rotating, and the rotation is accelerating, you also include the "centrifugal/centripetal forces" etc in the same way.

Ignoring weight and drag for a simple example: if the rocket body has mass M, the motor has mass m, and the thrust is T, the acceleration of the rocket is T/(m+M).

The d'Alembert force on the rocket body is -MT/(m+M), and that is the force the rocket body exerts on the motor.

The d'Alembert force on the motor is -mT/(m+M). The resultant force on the motor is T - mT/(m+M) = +MT/(m+M) which is the force the motor exerts on the rocket body.

Of course you can interpret this in terms of the acceleration in a non-accelerating reference frame: the fraction m/(m+M) of the thrust is accelerating the motor itself, and M/(m+M) is accelerating the rocket.
 
AZ,

Very helpful of you, I'm going to give this some thought when I have some time off tomorrow...see if I can't finish my problem.
 
Posted June 2024 - 15 years after starting this class. I have learned a whole lot. To get to the short course on making your stock car, late model, hobby stock E-mod handle, look at the index below. Read all posts on Roll Center, Jacking effect and Why does car drive straight to the wall when I gas it? Also read You really have two race cars. This will cover 90% of problems you have. Simply put, the car pushes going in and is loose coming out. You do not have enuff downforce on the right...
I'm trying to decide what size and type of galvanized steel I need for 2 cantilever extensions. The cantilever is 5 ft. The space between the two cantilever arms is a 17 ft Gap the center 7 ft of the 17 ft Gap we'll need to Bear approximately 17,000 lb spread evenly from the front of the cantilever to the back of the cantilever over 5 ft. I will put support beams across these cantilever arms to support the load evenly
Thread 'Physics of Stretch: What pressure does a band apply on a cylinder?'
Scenario 1 (figure 1) A continuous loop of elastic material is stretched around two metal bars. The top bar is attached to a load cell that reads force. The lower bar can be moved downwards to stretch the elastic material. The lower bar is moved downwards until the two bars are 1190mm apart, stretching the elastic material. The bars are 5mm thick, so the total internal loop length is 1200mm (1190mm + 5mm + 5mm). At this level of stretch, the load cell reads 45N tensile force. Key numbers...
Back
Top