NASA Press Release 99-239
September 7, 1999
X-33 Liquid Hydrogen Fuel Tank Ready For Tests at NASA's Marshall Space Flight
Center
A major component of the X-33 advanced technology demonstrator -- one of its
twin composite liquid hydrogen fuel tanks -- soon will undergo a series of pressure
and stress tests at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.
Tests are to begin this week on the first of two 4,600-pound graphite epoxy tanks,
each designed to carry approximately 29,000 gallons of rocket fuel -- liquid hydrogen
-- at -423 degrees Fahrenheit. The twin hydrogen tanks form the flanks of the X-33
vehicle and comprise roughly half its airframe.
The X-33 is being developed in a partnership between NASA and the Lockheed Martin
Skunk Works, Palmdale, Calif. The vehicle is a half-scale, sub-orbital technology
demonstrator of a proposed future reusable launch vehicle Lockheed Martin calls "VentureStarTM."
Managed for NASA by the Marshall Center, the X-33 program is designed to demonstrate
advanced technologies that will dramatically increase launch vehicle reliability
and safety, while lowering the cost of putting a pound of payload into space from
$10,000 to $1,000.
The first 29-foot tank has been placed into a structural test facility in the
West Test Area at the Marshall Center where it will receive cryogenic, or very low
temperature, propellant and structural loads and pressure cycles over a four to six-week
period. External loads also will be applied to the tank to simulate pre-takeoff,
takeoff, ascent, return and landing conditions.
"These are the largest composite cryogenic tanks ever built," said
Cleon Lacefield, Lockheed Martin Skunk Works vice president for X-33/VentureStarTM.
"Not only will they hold the super-cold liquid hydrogen, but they also will
provide the structural strength of the vehicle and are shaped to conform to the X-33's
body. Obviously, designing and assembling these tanks was quite a challenge, and
our NASA and industry team did a great job."
"Being able to build key vehicle systems and tanks out of lightweight yet
strong composites is an enormous step toward getting us launch vehicles that will
support routine and low-cost access to space," said Gene Austin, NASA X-33 program
manager, of the Marshall Center. "Short of the flight series, this month's
testing of the hydrogen tanks and also our aerospike engines marks the most significant
and exciting stage of the X-33 program."
Before testing the tank with liquid hydrogen, it will be partially filled with
liquid nitrogen and then pressurized to test its structural integrity. Once nitrogen
testing is complete, Marshall engineers will fill the tank with liquid hydrogen to
simulate internal pressure loads.
Crews have completed assembly of the X-33's second liquid hydrogen tank. The
tank is expected to arrive at Marshall in early October, with testing to begin later
this year.
When the Marshall Center tests are complete, the tanks will be shipped to Lockheed
Martin Skunk Works' X-33 assembly facility in Palmdale, Calif., where they will be
installed into the vehicle.
Alliant Techsystems in Clearfield, Utah, fabricated the composite components
for the tanks. A joint Lockheed Martin-Alliant team assembled the tanks in an enormous
autoclave at Lockheed Martin Missiles and Space, Sunnyvale, Calif.
The vehicle is scheduled to conduct flight tests beginning in summer 2000. It
will fly faster than 13 times the speed of sound and at an altitude of 60 miles to
prove its technologies and systems.