Characteristic velocity

Measure of rocket performance

Characteristic velocity or c {\displaystyle c^{*}} , or C-star is a measure of the combustion performance of a rocket engine independent of nozzle performance, and is used to compare different propellants and propulsion systems. c* should not be confused with c, which is the effective exhaust velocity related to the specific impulse by: I s = c g 0 {\displaystyle I_{s}={\frac {c}{g_{0}}}} . Specific impulse and effective exhaust velocity are dependent on the nozzle design unlike the characteristic velocity, explaining why C-star is an important value when comparing different propulsion system efficiencies. c* can be useful when comparing actual combustion performance to theoretical performance in order to determine how completely chemical energy release occurred. This is known as c*-efficiency.

Formula

c = p c A t m ˙ {\displaystyle c^{*}={\frac {p_{c}A_{t}}{\dot {m}}}}

  • c {\displaystyle c^{*}} is the characteristic velocity (m/s, ft/s)
  • p c {\displaystyle p_{c}} is the chamber pressure (Pa, psi)
  • A t {\displaystyle A_{t}} is the area of the throat (m2, in2)
  • m ˙ {\displaystyle {\dot {m}}} is the mass flow rate of the engine (kg/s, slug/s)

c = I s p g 0 C F = c C F = R T c γ ( γ + 1 2 ) γ + 1 γ 1 {\displaystyle c^{*}={\frac {I_{sp}g_{0}}{C_{F}}}={\frac {c}{C_{F}}}={\sqrt {{\frac {RT_{c}}{\gamma }}{\Bigl (}{\frac {\gamma +1}{2}}{\Bigr )}^{\frac {\gamma +1}{\gamma -1}}}}}

  • I s {\displaystyle I_{s}} is the specific impulse (s)
  • g 0 {\displaystyle g_{0}} is the gravitational acceleration at sea-level (m/s2)
  • C F {\displaystyle C_{F}} is the thrust coefficient
  • c {\displaystyle c} is the effective exhaust velocity (m/s)
  • γ {\displaystyle \gamma } is the specific heat ratio for the exhaust gases
  • R {\displaystyle R} is the gas constant per unit weight (J/kg-K)
  • T c {\displaystyle T_{c}} is the chamber temperature (K)


References

  • Rocket Propulsion Elements, 7th Edition by George P. Sutton, Oscar Biblarz
  • Rocket Propulsion Elements, 9th Edition by George P. Sutton, Oscar Biblarz
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