If you’re following 3D printing news at all, you probably know that NASA has been working towards building an entirely 3D printed rocket, and they’re getting closer, one part at a time. News about successful part tests have been coming out at pretty regular intervals during the year, with the latest being a test of a 3D printed gas generator engine component. Now, NASA has carried out the most comprehensive test yet, and it shows that they are very close indeed to successfully completing their mission.
It’s one thing to test individual parts, but it’s quite another to test them together. A turbopump, no matter how well it works, doesn’t do anyone much good by itself, after all. The most recent series of tests, carried out in October at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, had some promising results: the individual rocket components do, in fact, work pretty well together, and NASA is now three-quarters of the way to completing the first-ever completely 3D printed rocket engine.
“We manufactured and then tested about 75 percent of the parts needed to build a 3-D printed rocket engine,” said project manager Elizabeth Robertson. “By testing the turbopumps, injectors and valves together, we’ve shown that it would be possible to build a 3-D printed engine for multiple purposes such as landers, in-space propulsion or rocket engine upper stages.”
In the latest tests, the rocket engine was fired using cryogenic liquid hydrogen and oxygen to produce over 20,000 pounds of thrust, resulting in a pretty impressive, fiery blast:
The prototype isn’t configured exactly the same way as the final engine will be; to allow engineers to have access to all of the parts, they were wired together in a large configuration that won’t match the final product. But the important thing was that they worked the same way that they will in the final product.
“In engineering lingo, this is called a breadboard engine,” said testing lead Nick Case. “What matters is that the parts work the same way as they do in a conventional engine and perform under the extreme temperatures and pressures found inside a rocket engine. The turbopump got its ‘heartbeat’ racing at more than 90,000 revolutions per minute (rpm) and the end result is the flame you see coming out of the thrust chamber to produce over 20,000 pounds of thrust, and an engine like this could produce enough power for an upper stage of a rocket or a Mars lander.”
We’ve discussed the numerous benefits of 3D printing for the manufacture of aerospace components many times already: it dramatically reduces the time and cost required by traditional manufacturing methods, and it allows for less parts altogether. Large parts can be 3D printed in one piece, which is impossible in other forms of manufacturing. The turbopump, for example, required 45% fewer parts than it would have otherwise, and the injector has over 200 fewer parts than a traditionally manufactured one.
“This new manufacturing process really opened the design space and allowed for part geometries that would be impossible with traditional machining or casting methods,” said propulsion designer David Eddleman. “For the valve designs on this engine, we used more efficient structures in the piece parts that resulted in optimised performance.”
If you’re interested in the full materials characterization and performance data on the finished parts, you can request access to NASA’s Materials and Processes Technical Information System (MAPTIS). Discuss this story in the 3D Printed Rocket Engine forum on 3DPB.com. Now here’s a video of Case further explaining the construction of the breadboard engine: