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Solar-powered space flight

6b. Efficiently converting sunlight to thrust: Advantages of proposed mirror layout over SOTV isms

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6.4          The two mirror layouts proposed above are imaging and can therefore be used to provide power (or communications) in the same manner as the mirrors proposed for the SOTV. They also offer the following advantages over those proposed for the SOTV:

 

(a)    In principle they can deliver temperatures as high as circa 5900 K, i.e. the temperature of the sun’s photosphere (the Second Law of Thermodynamics implies that you cannot concentrate black body radiation such as sunlight to a temperature greater than the temperature of its source). However, this temperature exceeds the highest melting points of any elements, which are those of tungsten, circa 3680 K, and carbon, circa 3800 K, and so in practice it would be necessary to limit the temperature reached to, say, circa 3700K. Operating at circa 3700 K, the specific impulse a solar thermal engine could provide, using hydrogen as propellant, rises to about 1000 seconds (equivalent to a propellant ejection speed of about 10,000 ms-1). By ‘operating at circa 3700K’ we mean that the propellant is heated to this temperature in what would otherwise in a conventional chemical rocket be its combustion chamber. It is assumed that the expelled propellant would then pass through a rocket throat (in much the same manner as gasses expelled by a conventional rocket engine do), and would then experience the same sort of adiabatic cooling traversing the rocket nozzle as happens in a conventional rocket engine.

 

(b)   They would reduce the area onto which the sunlight is concentrated, which reduces the amount reradiated away and improves overall energy efficiency. In the vicinity of the earth, the proposed mirror layouts would concentrate sunlight onto a circle with a radius circa 215 times smaller than the overall collector radius (and hence circa 46,000 times smaller in area). When operating at 3700 K approximately 15% of the incident sunlight falling onto such a solar thermal engine would then be reradiated away. If, say, the propellant from a solar thermal rocket left the rocket nozzle at a temperature of 1000 K then the thermodynamic efficiency of the engine would be subject to a thermodynamic upper limit of around , but it would seem unlikely that the net conversion efficiency of the energy in the sunlight to thrust would exceed say 40%, taking into account other potential energy losses (although see later). For comparison, the combusted fuel in the Space Shuttle’s main booster engine apparently reaches a temperature of at least 2000K in its combustion chamber, but leaves the end of its rocket nozzle at c. 900K. Parabolic mirrors can only concentrate to circa one-quarter of this thermodynamic upper limit, see Winston (1991), and hence to about a 30% lower temperature (although in combination with further lenses they can get closer to the thermodynamic upper limit). This would still mean that they would be subject to the same circa 3700K limit referred to above; the main difference therefore is that their collector surface area would be larger, making them less efficient overall.

 

(c)    They can be reused post reaching (high) orbit as a solar sail, see Kemp (2003), either by:

 

-          No longer having the sun’s rays parallel to the axis of symmetry, so that the larger mirror no longer focuses the sunlight onto the smaller mirror but deflects it in a different direction as per a traditional single mirror solar sail, or

 

-          By keeping the sun’s rays parallel to the axis of symmetry of the vehicle, but then putting a third small mirror at the focal point of the arrangement (instead of the solar thermal engine) and using that third mirror to deflect the sunlight in the direction as desired as per (a). This third mirror might most conveniently be parabolic, as then if it is suitably positioned the deflected rays would be deflected in tolerably similar directions, even though they would be approaching the focal point from a wide range of angles. This approach is more complex than a traditional single mirror solar sail, but should in principle be modestly more efficient per unit mirror mass, see Kemp (2003). However, it may be difficult to maintain the positioning with sufficient accuracy, see later.

 

Reaching a high orbit before switching to a solar sail is necessary because even at an altitude of, say, 500 km atmospheric drag is still significant in the context of the very small thrust that a solar sail might provide.

 

6.5          If we assume a 40% conversion efficiency of solar power into thrust and a mirror surface area factor of 1.1 then the mirror masses per unit lifted mass rise by a factor of around 3. A schematic diagram of such a vehicle, not drawn to scale, is set out in Figure 11 (the same diagram could apply in solar sail mode as per (c)(i) but with the sun’s rays now no longer parallel to the axis of symmetry). Please note that there might in practice be more than three wires connecting the main mirror to the rest of the vehicle superstructure, see later.

 

Figure 11. Schematic drawing of mirror layout used for solar thermal propulsion

 

6.6          One worry might be that it would be impossible to create a slab of low enough mass able to cope with the relevant heat transfer involved with a solar thermal engine. Careful design is likely to be needed to maximise heat transfer whilst minimising mass and maximising structural rigidity, but it should not be impossible. The solar power concentrated onto the slab would be approximately 46,000 × 1.37 kW m-2 = 63 × 106 kW m-2. If we assume the slab is made of tungsten and it has a thermal conductivity of circa 100 W m-1K-1 at the relevant temperature (Kaye and Laby (1986) have a figure of 119 at 973 K, but reducing as temperature rises) and heat transference takes place through a slab with effective thickness for this purpose of 1mm then the temperature differential involved would be 630K. Tungsten has a tensile strength of 1500 – 3500 MPa. Even if all of the force from the rocket thrust is borne by the slab, the pressure should in theory (for the  = 10 kW/kg case considered in Table 4) be only at most around roughly (1 + 6.2) ×  × 46000 × 1.37 × 103 / 72 = 89 MPa. As the density of tungsten is approximately 19 × 103 kg m-3, such a slab should also contribute a mass per unit mirror area perpendicular to the sun’s rays of around 19 × 103 × 0.001 / 46000 = 0.4 g m-2. This is not an excessive amount in relation to the probable mirror mass of, say, 5 g m-2. However, it is worth noting that unpublished estimates that the author has seen suggest that current solar thermal engine designs are considerably more massive than implied by this theoretical analysis, indeed they are probably even less close to what is theoretically achievable than are current concentrator designs, see next section.

 


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