TECH NASA 3-D Prints First Full-Scale Copper Rocket Engine Part

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
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http://www.nasa.gov/marshall/news/nasa-3-D-prints-first-full-scale-copper-rocket-engine-part.html

April 21, 2015

NASA 3-D Prints First Full-Scale Copper Rocket Engine Part

When you think of copper, the penny in your pocket may come to mind; but NASA engineers are trying to save taxpayers millions of pennies by 3-D printing the first full-scale, copper rocket engine part.

“Building the first full-scale, copper rocket part with additive manufacturing is a milestone for aerospace 3-D printing,” said Steve Jurczyk, associate administrator for the Space Technology Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Additive manufacturing is one of many technologies we are embracing to help us continue our journey to Mars and even sustain explorers living on the Red Planet.”

Numerous complex parts made of many different materials are assembled to make engines that provide the thrust that powers rockets. Additive manufacturing has the potential to reduce the time and cost of making rocket parts like the copper liner found in rocket combustion chambers where super-cold propellants are mixed and heated to the extreme temperatures needed to send rockets to space.

“On the inside of the paper-edge-thin copper liner wall, temperatures soar to over 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit, and we have to keep it from melting by recirculating gases cooled to less than 100 degrees above absolute zero on the other side of the wall,” said Chris Singer, director of the Engineering Directorate at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, where the copper rocket engine liner was manufactured. “To circulate the gas, the combustion chamber liner has more than 200 intricate channels built between the inner and outer liner wall. Making these tiny passages with complex internal geometries challenged our additive manufacturing team.”

A selective laser melting machine in Marshall’s Materials and Processing Laboratory fused 8,255 layers of copper powder to make the chamber in 10 days and 18 hours. Before making the liner, materials engineers built several other test parts, characterized the material and created a process for additive manufacturing with copper.

“Copper is extremely good at conducting heat,” explained Zach Jones, the materials engineer who led the manufacturing at Marshall. “That’s why copper is an ideal material for lining an engine combustion chamber and for other parts as well, but this property makes the additive manufacturing of copper challenging because the laser has difficulty continuously melting the copper powder.”

Only a handful of copper rocket parts have been made with additive manufacturing, so NASA is breaking new technological ground by 3-D printing a rocket component that must withstand both extreme hot and cold temperatures and has complex cooling channels built on the outside of an inner wall that is as thin as a pencil mark. The part is built with GRCo-84, a copper alloy created by materials scientists at NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, where extensive materials characterization helped validate the 3-D printing processing parameters and ensure build quality. Glenn will develop an extensive database of mechanical properties that will be used to guide future 3-D printed rocket engine designs. To increase U.S. industrial competitiveness, data will be made available to American manufacturers in NASA’s Materials and Processing Information System (MAPTIS) managed by Marshall.

electron microscope image
This electron microscope image shows raw copper powder used to build the 3-D printed copper liner. Scientists at NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, where the alloy was invented, characterized the samples to understand how powder quality and characteristics impacted build qualities.
Credits: NASA/GRC/Laura Evans

“Our goal is to build rocket engine parts up to 10 times faster and reduce cost by more than 50 percent,” said Chris Protz, the Marshall propulsion engineer leading the project. “We are not trying to just make and test one part. We are developing a repeatable process that industry can adopt to manufacture engine parts with advanced designs. The ultimate goal is to make building rocket engines more affordable for everyone.”

Optical Microscope Photo from GRC
This optical microscope image of an etched copper sample helped scientists at NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, as they characterized the quality of the copper for various build parameters for the copper liner.
Credits: NASA/GRC/Ivan Locci

Manufacturing the copper liner is only the first step of the Low Cost Upper Stage-Class Propulsion Project funded by NASA’s Game Changing Development Program in the Space Technology Mission Directorate. NASA’s Game Changing Program funds the development of technologies that will revolutionize future space endeavors, including NASA’s journey to Mars. The next step in this project is for Marshall engineers to ship the copper liner to NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, where an electron beam freedom fabrication facility will direct deposit a nickel super-alloy structural jacket onto the outside of the copper liner. Later this summer, the engine component will be hot-fire tested at Marshall to determine how the engine performs under extreme temperatures and pressures simulating the conditions inside the engine as it burns propellant during a rocket flight.

Tracy McMahan
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
256-544-0034
tracy.mcmahan@nasa.gov
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
All very nice, but NASA's official mission now is to help Muslims feel good about themselves. How does this techno trivia advance the mission?
 

Oreally

Right from the start
this 3D printing thing has the potential to totally change the world in really unexpected ways.

for example, soon, it may not matter that the NWO has sent all our manufacturing to china, if it becomes possible for anyone, in their basements, to produce small run, one off parts and products. it all depends on the development of suitable additive materials.

just about anyone can learn to design 3D with autocad, and then move the design to a 3D printer.

in fact, it may turn out that it was a good thing that the off-shoring happened, since it has gotten rid of a lot of obsolete plant and equipment., kinda like what happened to japan and germany after WWII

now if only they don't crash the civilization before that happens.
 

tanstaafl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Well, temporarily ignoring everything else about the story, the first fourteen words of the very first sentence are just plain ignorant. It's only been 33 years since that sentence was mostly true. That brand new "copper" penny in your pocket since 1982 weighs 2.5 grams and contains a whopping grand total of 0.0625 grams of copper. That relatively tiny bit of copper is a VERY thin coating over a zinc core (97.5%). Heck, depending on your age, health, weight, and species, strip off the copper plating, swallow a few, and it's possible they'll literally kill you. I absolutely despise the things.

I cease my rant and return you now to your regularly scheduled thread subject (3D printing is way cool, by the way).
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
When you think of copper, the penny in your pocket may come to mind

Well, temporarily ignoring everything else about the story, the first fourteen words of the very first sentence are just plain ignorant. It's only been 33 years since that sentence was mostly true. That brand new "copper" penny in your pocket since 1982 weighs 2.5 grams and contains a whopping grand total of 0.0625 grams of copper. That relatively tiny bit of copper is a VERY thin coating over a zinc core (97.5%).

The sentence was completely true. When you thought of copper, you had no trouble at all connecting that thought with the penny in your pocket.
 

tanstaafl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The sentence was completely true. When you thought of copper, you had no trouble at all connecting that thought with the penny in your pocket.

No, I had no trouble connecting that thought because the sentence itself specifically read, "When you think of copper, the penny in your pocket may come to mind." If someone had said to me, what do you think of when you think about copper (with no additional qualifier), I would have probably said "plumbing pipes" or "electrical wiring." Thirty-three years is more than enough time (or should be) to adjust to the idea that modern pennies are copper only in the most casual sense of the word. Just last night a store clerk asked if I wanted the penny in change back and I replied "Only if it's copper" ... it wasn't and I tossed it in the change bowl saying "Who would want a zinc penny?"

But to get back to the thread subject, the OP makes the point that the more advanced 3D printers no longer print just variations of plastic. Metal parts are now entirely within reach.
 

FaithfulSkeptic

Carrying the mantle of doubt
What really exciting is when you realize 3D printing is still in its infancy. Think what it will be 50 years from now. The resolution will get smaller, the material base will expand, and complex material combinations is almost a certainty. Has the potential to change a LOT of things.
 

methos

Contributing Member
roll a truck up to your lot and print the shell of your new house. hmm, you're right faithful, the material base will continue to expand, that will really drive it.
 

TheSearcher

Are you sure about that?
What really exciting is when you realize 3D printing is still in its infancy. Think what it will be 50 years from now. The resolution will get smaller, the material base will expand, and complex material combinations is almost a certainty. Has the potential to change a LOT of things.

Fiber and plastic are already being put together. I don't think anyone will have to wait 50 years.
 
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