Abstract
Field demonstrations of liquid hydrogen technology will be undertaken for the proliferation of advanced methods and applications in the use of cryofuels. Advancements in the use of cryofuels for transportation on Earth, from Earth, or in space are envisioned for automobiles, aircraft, rockets, and spacecraft. These advancements rely on practical ways of storage, transfer, and handling of liquid hydrogen. Focusing on storage, an integrated heat exchanger system has been designed for incorporation with an existing storage tank and a reverse Brayton cycle helium refrigerator of capacity 850 watts at 20 K. The storage tank is a 125,000-liter capacity horizontal cylindrical tank, with vacuum jacket and multilayer insulation, and a small 0.6-meter diameter manway opening. Addressed are the specific design challenges associated with the small opening, complete modularity, pressure systems re-certification for lower temperature and pressure service associated with hydrogen densification, and a large 8:1 length-to-diameter ratio for distribution of the cryogenic refrigeration. The approach, problem solving, and system design and analysis for integrated heat exchanger are detailed and discussed. Implications for future space launch facilities are also identified. The objective of the field demonstration will be to test various zero-loss and densified cryofuel handling concepts for future transportation applications.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Fesmire, J. E., Tomsik, T. M., Bonner, T., Oliveira, J. M., Conyers, H. J., Johnson, W. L., & Notardonato, W. U. (2014). Integrated heat exchanger design for a cryogenic storage tank. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1573, pp. 1365–1372). American Institute of Physics Inc. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4860865
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.