1 / 17

Water Rocket Modeling

Water Rocket Modeling. Sean Munson Ben Donaldson Alex Dillon. Design Goals. Range Accuracy Aesthetics These tell us little about how to build a rocket!. The Model. What happens to the rocket?. Air Thrust Phase remaining air pressure leaves rocket.

cachet
Télécharger la présentation

Water Rocket Modeling

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Water Rocket Modeling Sean MunsonBen Donaldson Alex Dillon

  2. Design Goals • Range • Accuracy • Aesthetics These tell us little about how to build a rocket!

  3. The Model

  4. What happens to the rocket? Air Thrust Phaseremaining air pressure leaves rocket Coast PhaseGravity, drag act on rocket until it smashes to the ground Boost Phase Water leaving rocket under pressure

  5. Boost Phase

  6. Boost Phase: Thrust

  7. Coast Phase

  8. Coast Phase: Drag

  9. “Whoa, what about the Air Phase?” Us: “We neglected it, sort of.” You: “You can’t just do that…” Us: “Well, actually, since we made some other assumptions…”

  10. What’s Important? • Cross Sectional Area (Nozzle, bottle) • Coefficient of Drag (CD, Surface area) • Mass of Rocket • Pressure • Volume of Water

  11. Validation of the Model& Experiments

  12. Launchers don’t workmost launches required a kickto free the rocket, making itdifficult to measure the angle A Preface • Rocket for tests was constructed in ~20minutes, with cardboard fins

  13. Mass vs. Range • Pressure: 70 psig • Volume H20: 0.7 liters • Angle: 35° • Observations: • Launch without ballast (rocket mass: 70 grams) highly erratic • Stability problems above or below 0.11 kg • Determined CD to be 1.8

  14. Volume H2O vs. Range • Mass: 0.150 kilograms • Pressure: 70 psig • Angle: 30°

  15. What the #&$% ?The stout kick requiredlikely changed the angleto 20° or 25°. Pressure vs. Range • Mass: 0.186 kilograms • Volume H20: 0.8 liters • Angle 30° • Observations: • Last set of tests. Fins  mush Data  unreliable • Clearly, more pressure is good so long as you do not exceed safety margins

  16. Design Goals: • Low CD, A • Parabolic, smooth nose • Experiment with multiple 1L bottles • Mass: ~115 grams • Experimentation with nozzle area? • Difficult with these launchers • Tight but loose fit on launcher?

  17. Questions?

More Related