DOI: 10.3390/aerospace13060559 ISSN: 2226-4310

Preliminary Development and Experimental Validation of a Clustering Hybrid Rocket Module for Soft-Landing Application

Donghee Lee, Donggeun Lee, Sungwoo Park, Jungpyo Lee, Heejang Moon

This study presents the preliminary development of a clustered hybrid propulsion module, and its experimental validation from static motor characterization to dynamic 1-D vertical drop tests to assess the feasibility of a hybrid propulsion system for soft-landing applications. The research progresses from preliminary design of core components (such as fuel, oxidizer supply system, engine configuration), to the performance verification of the clustering module. First, the trade-off between high regression rates and mechanical integrity was evaluated for paraffin-based fuels. However, high-density polyethylene (HDPE) was utilized as the baseline to ensure predictable combustion behavior. Second, cold flow tests of the designed multi-port manifold demonstrated a highly uniform oxidizer distribution, validating the geometric design with a maximum spatial pressure deviation of 2.44% across the four engines. Third, static fire tests confirmed robust dynamic control capabilities, successfully throttling the average chamber pressure from 100% (7.00 bar) down to 43% (3.01 bar) and back to 100% (7.01 bar) with a transient response time of approximately 0.6 s. Finally, the 1-D vertical drop test validated the operational readiness of the system; the open-loop thrust modulation successfully counteracted the module’s dynamic weight, achieving a terminal descent velocity of 1.46 m/s, which strictly satisfies planetary soft-landing safety criteria. These results demonstrate the feasibility and performance of clustered hybrid propulsion systems for planetary exploration, extending to surface launch technology for sample return missions from the Moon and Mars, and precision booster recovery for small launch vehicles.

More from our Archive