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Dive into the research topics where Samuel Darr is active.

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Featured researches published by Samuel Darr.


53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting | 2015

Numerical Simulation of Liquid Nitrogen Chilldown of a Vertical Tube

Samuel Darr; Hong Hu; Reid Schaeffer; J.N. Chung; Jason Hartwig; Alok Majumdar

This paper presents the results of a one-dimensional numerical simulation of the transient chilldown of a vertical stainless steel tube with liquid nitrogen. The direction of flow is downward (with gravity) through the tube. Heat transfer correlations for film, transition, and nucleate boiling, as well as critical heat flux, rewetting temperature, and the temperature at the onset of nucleate boiling were used to model the convection to the tube wall. Chilldown curves from the simulations were compared with data from 55 recent liquid nitrogen chilldown experiments. With these new correlations the simulation is able to predict the time to rewetting temperature and time to onset of nucleate boiling to within 25% for mass fluxes ranging from 61.2 to 1150 kg/(sq m s), inlet pressures from 175 to 817 kPa, and subcooled inlet temperatures from 0 to 14 K below the saturation temperature.


Physics of Fluids | 2014

Analytical model for steady flow through a finite channel with one porous wall with arbitrary variable suction or injection

Jason Hartwig; Samuel Darr

This paper presents an exact solution of two-dimensional laminar flow through a finite length channel with one porous wall. It improves upon previous solutions by (1) satisfying the no-slip boundary condition at the channel dead end, (2) adding a turbulent term to the porous wall boundary condition, (3) allowing for arbitrary variable suction or injection across the porous wall, and (4) model validation against new cryogenic liquid hydrogen and oxygen experimental data. Of particular interest in the current work is the modeling of cryogenic propellant flow through a porous liquid acquisition device (LAD) screen and channel inside a propellant tank. First, a detailed review of the literature is presented for previously attempted solutions to channel flow with one porous wall. Next, the governing equations, boundary conditions, and model assumptions are used to derive the analytical flow solution and present general model results for pressure and velocity fields within the channel. Then, the model solution ...


npj Microgravity | 2016

The effect of reduced gravity on cryogenic nitrogen boiling and pipe chilldown

Samuel Darr; Jun Dong; Neil Glikin; Jason Hartwig; Alok Majumdar; Andre LeClair; J.N. Chung

Manned deep space exploration will require cryogenic in-space propulsion. Yet, accurate prediction of cryogenic pipe flow boiling heat transfer is lacking, due to the absence of a cohesive reduced gravity data set covering the expected flow and thermodynamic parameter ranges needed to validate cryogenic two-phase heat transfer models. This work provides a wide range of cryogenic chilldown data aboard an aircraft flying parabolic trajectories to simulate reduced gravity. Liquid nitrogen is used to quench a 1.27 cm diameter tube from room temperature. The pressure, temperature, flow rate, and inlet conditions are reported from 10 tests covering liquid Reynolds number from 2,000 to 80,000 and pressures from 80 to 810 kPa. Corresponding terrestrial gravity tests were performed in upward, downward, and horizontal flow configurations to identify gravity and flow direction effects on chilldown. Film boiling heat transfer was lessened by up to 25% in reduced gravity, resulting in longer time and more liquid to quench the pipe to liquid temperatures. Heat transfer was enhanced by increasing the flow rate, and differences between reduced and terrestrial gravity diminished at high flow rates. The new data set will enable the development of accurate and robust heat transfer models of cryogenic pipe chilldown in reduced gravity.


Physics of Fluids | 2017

Hydrodynamic model of screen channel liquid acquisition devices for in-space cryogenic propellant management

Samuel Darr; C. F. Camarotti; Jason Hartwig; J.N. Chung

Technologies that enable the storage and transfer of cryogenic propellants in space will be needed for the next generation vehicles that will carry humans to Mars. One of the candidate technologies is the screen channel liquid acquisition device (LAD), which uses a metal woven wire mesh to separate the liquid and vapor phases so that single-phase liquid propellant can be transferred in microgravity. In this work, an experiment is carried out that provides measurements of the velocity and pressure fields in a screen channel LAD. These data are used to validate a new analytical solution of the liquid flow through a screen channel LAD. This hydrodynamic model, which accounts for non-uniform injection through the screen, is compared with the traditional pressure term summation model which assumes a constant, uniform injection velocity. Results show that the new model performs best against the new data and historical data. The velocity measurements inside the screen channel LAD are used to provide a more accur...


Applied Thermal Engineering | 2014

Influential factors for liquid acquisition device screen selection for cryogenic propulsion systems

Jason Hartwig; Samuel Darr


Cryogenics | 2014

Parametric analysis of the liquid hydrogen and nitrogen bubble point pressure for cryogenic liquid acquisition devices

Jason Hartwig; Jay Mann; Samuel Darr


International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer | 2016

An experimental study on terrestrial cryogenic tube chilldown II. Effect of flow direction with respect to gravity and new correlation set

Samuel Darr; Hong Hu; N.G. Glikin; Jason Hartwig; Alok Majumdar; Andre LeClair; J.N. Chung


International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer | 2016

Assessment of existing two phase heat transfer coefficient and critical heat flux correlations for cryogenic flow boiling in pipe quenching experiments

Jason Hartwig; Samuel Darr; Anthony Asencio


International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2014

Optimal liquid acquisition device screen weave for a liquid hydrogen fuel depot

Samuel Darr; Jason Hartwig


Cryogenics | 2014

A steady state pressure drop model for screen channel liquid acquisition devices

Jason Hartwig; Samuel Darr; John McQuillen; Enrique Rame; David J. Chato

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Alok Majumdar

Marshall Space Flight Center

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Hong Hu

University of Florida

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Andre LeClair

Marshall Space Flight Center

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