Heat flux calibration facility capable of SSME conditions Article Swipe
There is a need to more thoroughly characterize the hostile space shuttle main engine (SSME) turbopump environment. It has been estimated that component surface heat flux in the hot-gas environment is about 10 MW/square meter, and this is about 50 times that encountered in aircraft engines. Also, material temperature transients can be as high as 1000 K in about 1 second. These transients can cause durability problems such as material cracking. Heat flux sensors placed in the turbopump components can partially characterize this environment by measuring surface heat flux. These heat flux data can be used to verify analytical-stress, boundary-layer, and heat-transfer design models. Preliminary plans were discussed at the first SSME durablity conference for designing and fabricating a new facility for the calibration and durability testing of prototype heat flux sensors for the SSME. This facility, which is necessary for assessment of new heat flux gauge concepts needed in the hostile SSME turbopump environment, is described.