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tahanson43206,
Calliban has posted research aimed at producing Carbon Monoxide from CO2.
I have posted research aimed at producing elemental Carbon from CO2.
Since elemental Carbon and Carbon Monoxide are two different substances, what's our basis for comparison here?
Calliban,
This is the process I'm thinking of:
This is the device:
This CO2 splitting process does not directly consume electricity for the purpose of stripping the O2 from the CO2. There will obviously be the bath vibrator to help "bubble" (disperse and react the CO2 through the eutectic mixture) the CO2 through the column of liquid metal, which is electrical, and pumps to pump-in the CO2, and another pump to pump-out / compress the O2 if the O2 is also captured. I presume the pumps would be electrical because that's how we normally do it whenever we can. Maybe the pump doesn't have to be electrical and maybe some kind of mechanical device could vibrate the eutectic mixture tube in its hot water bath, but that seems like a lot of extra work when electrical pumps already get the job done.
All that said, there are combinations of purely chemical and electrocatalytic processes involving various room temperature liquid metals and lanthanide catalysts. IIRC, the express stated purpose of these catalysts is production of syngas (for fuels and plastics) and alcohols (presumably for Alcohol-derived fuels, but also for chemicals), not solid Carbon powder (as close as we're going to get to synthetic coal).
I believe the papers you're looking at are for partial CO2 splitting of syngas and other short-chain hydrocarbon molecules. Almost everyone is primarily interested in synthetic liquid fuels, not synthetic coal. The general idea is that refinement of these new processes or something similar can produce the gasoline, diesel, and kerosene fuels we prefer to use.
Calliban,
CO2 bubbled through a Gallium-Indium-Copper catalyst will produce pure O2 and flakes of pure Carbon that float to the top of the liquid metal column, very near room temperature. There will be plenty of other losses associated with obtaining CO2, compressing the O2 oxidizer, and possibly liquefying it to further reduce storage volume, but CO2 will always be plentiful on Mars and can be extracted at night and stored as LCO2 using minimal energy input. The Carbon powder can be pumped by fluidizing it with LCO2. Storing large amounts of O2, even somewhere pretty cold like Mars, is the most challenging issue. The exhaust effluent from a gas turbine burning pure Carbon and O2 is nearly pure CO2, which can be recaptured using appropriate cooling and recompression equipment.
The Allam-Fetvedt cycle uses a SCO2 power turbine and recaptures most of the CO2 effluent from combustion for heat re-injection. Approximately 95% of the "atmosphere" fed into the combustor is actually recycled hot CO2. The remainder is coal dust or natural gas and pure or O2-enriched "air". Re-heating of a larger volume of "cold combustible mixture" is not required. Here on Earth, this cycle is paired with an energy-robbing ASU to produce pure or enriched O2. Using the Gallium-Indium-Copper catalyst to produce coal dust and O2 would mean the major energy losses are limited to O2 compression and CO2 recompression.
We're going to start operating a 300MWe power plant in Odessa, Texas, starting in 2026. It was built by NetPower on land owned by Occidental Petroleum, who is presumably supplying the gas. A 50MWth demo plant has already been built and tested in La Porte, Texas. The utility scale plant will burn natural gas instead of coal powder, but that's because we have so much natural gas here. Another similar plant being built in one of the other midwest states will supposedly be rigged to burn coal brought in from the Powder River Basin. Plant construction for the Odessa facility is nearing completion. Certification to get connected to our grid is on track to begin next year.
An overhead shot of the La Porte, Texas demo facility:
I can't swear to it, but I believe the Odessa facility is merely a rework of part of an existing 1GWe natural gas fired power plant that's been in operation for some time now.
NET Power Consolidates Business to Gear Up for Allam Cycle Power Plant Deployment
Assuming all goes well in Odessa, and the engineers seem reasonably confident that it will, they're talking about converting 1,000 power plants here in the US and about 15,000 globally.
All the headlines say "40 months", but that's for each of his three convictions for government-unapproved music, to be served concurrently, so it's actually 10 years. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was only sentenced to 8 years in the gulag for his various criticisms of Stalin. 10 years for music that the British government finds distasteful is more punitive than criticizing the Soviet government's leader during his purges.
You Brits gave up your arms in the 1980s. Within a human lifetime you lost your freedom of speech. You will likely lose even more of your freedoms in fairly short order. Don't expect to get any of them back without a fight. That's how government works- all of them, to include our government here in America. It's always worked that way. Anyone who thought otherwise thought wrong.
tahanson43206,
Aircraft propellers are balanced using a method similar to what you described. The prop is mounted on a level jig using a pin or pipe through its center. The individual blades are checked for balance by moving them to the vertical and horizontal positions, letting go to determine whether or not the blade falls / moves out of position due to gravity, and then sanding individual blades or adding small weights to the prop. It's a "trial-and-error" type of process, but those experienced in building propellers become good at determining where material should be removed to achieve balance. When you can position each blade in the vertical and horizontal positions by hand and let go of the propeller without further movement, static balance has been achieved. This test is almost always performed by the manufacturer of propeller / rotor blade assemblies.
Achieving dynamic propeller / rotor assembly balance requires some rather sophisticated and expensive accelerometer equipment to evaluate assembly acceleration during operation, but this is frequently done anyway for aircraft propellers and helicopter rotor blades to reduce the vibration generated during flight. This test cannot be performed by the manufacturer, only the operator of the aircraft, because engine / motor balance in an actual installation is part of achieving dynamic balance for the connected propeller / rotor. The same would be true of a wind turbine's rotating assembly. Every installation will be slightly different. Dynamic balance is typically achieved by inserting a washer or two under the bolts going through the prop hub. The vibration reduction is physically noticeable by most people, meaning your body can actually feel and your ears hear the difference while seated in the aircraft while the prop or rotor is turning at cruise rpm.
The prop / rotor is effectively a high-inertia flywheel, so if it's out-of-balance while turning, it's pretty noticeable. The same is true of flywheels and crankshaft balance weights attached to engines in motor vehicles like cars / trucks / trains / boats, but there's typically a lot more vehicle and drive train component mass to help absorb those engine vibrations than there is in aircraft. Regardless, a perfectly balanced engine / motor, propeller / rotor for vehicles that use them, and drive train will be smoother and quieter in operation. Excessive vibration is ultimately damaging to the propeller assembly, engine / motor, drive train, and the airframe or vehicle chassis itself, so the less you have, the better. Engineers who design engines for motor vehicles typically devote quite a bit of time to "Noise / Vibration / Harshness" (NVH) reduction. Race engine builders will devote even more time than a production plant to perfectly balancing all the components in the rotating assembly of an engine- crankshaft / connecting rods / pistons always, sometimes even the camshafts and other valve train components of very high-revving engines. Using CNC machines to make parts doesn't automatically guarantee that they're balanced correctly due to "stacking tolerances". Every mass produced part is made to a tolerance range, however fine. When money is no object, additional measurement, touch labor, and machining is used to minimize those "stacking tolerances".
Calliban,
Irrespective of how light or heavy the completed rotor assembly happens to be, it's going to work better when balanced.
Have you already done that already, or is it on your "to do" list?
tahanson43206,
Are we still on for our 1PM CST / 2PM EST Sunday install of phpBB3 for user-generated image storage?
tahanson43206,
A 2.5MWe Horizontal-Axis Wind Turbine (HAWT), uses over 400t of materials in its construction, mostly steel / concrete / CFRP composites by mass. For comparison purposes, a 2.5MWe AirLoom Wind Turbine (ALWT) only needs 15t of materials, also mostly steel / concrete / CFRP composites by mass. In either case, all of those materials must be mined, or at least refined even if we do have existing scrap metal to use, and transported using diesel-powered machines. A construction crew arriving by off-road-capable pickup trucks can erect an ALWT. To erect a HAWT, you need to first build a gravel road leading to the field so a train of semi-trucks can deliver the tonnage of materials required. That's a dramatic difference in time and materials investment.
For the ALWT, the construction crew is also carrying the materials with them in the beds of their pickups because so much less mass and therefore transport machinery is involved. From a storage depot in a town, I send the guys out in their own Ford F250s with the materials to build one turbine base per day. In the case of the HAWT, you need to hire independent contractors to facilitate materials shipment via a small convoy of semi-trucks and the construction crew still arrives in their own F250s. Assume for a moment that I don't want to spend the money or time to obtain permits to build a road. I don't want to hire two or three different trucking companies (one for the concrete, one for the steel and other heavy equipment that requires cranes, one to transport the delicate blades) to transport the materials, either. I cut out all of that cost and annoyance by using a technology that's almost 30X lighter for the same power output. I have to interact with the FAA, amongst other government agencies, in order to build the giant HAWTs. ALWT seems almost effortless by way of comparison. I have to pay a little bit more for the land use, but that's about it.
I've never heard of a HAWT having its steel-reinforced concrete base recycled to reclaim the materials consumed. An ALWT doesn't need a 50ft deep crater excavated to pour its concrete base, because the "towers" are not as tall as the Statue of Liberty and don't have to resist the force of the wind pushing on the very top of that tower, via 3 turbine blades longer and heavier than a jumbo airliner's entire wing structure.
I can't speak for anyone else, but it's obvious what the real benefits are- a wild difference in weight and therefore cost. If this thing works even half as well as they claim, I would never entertain the idea of erecting miniature skyscrapers for a few megawatts of power per unit.
Suppose we did simply create an open pit "mine" of the kind shown by SpaceNut in Post #30. The "Superdome" that Calliban want to build is merely a means to an end- pressurized living space, presumably appropriately "greened" using seeds brought from Earth. Apart from holding in the pressure, I presume the most important secondary reason for piling on so much regolith over the structure is to block-out space-based radiation, primarily the highly penetrating and damaging (slowly but surely) Galactic Cosmic Rays (GCR). All available literature from NASA indicates that using approximately 2m of regolith shielding is sufficient to absorb enough of the dose to remain below lifetime limits. GCR is not like SPE / CME radiation, in that it consists of ionized nuclei, ranging in weight from Hydrogen to Iron, although it's over 90% Hydrogen in practice, traveling through space near the speed of light. There's no practical passive shielding material for an interplanetary spacecraft due to shielding mass, but once the settlers arrive on Mars we're obligated to provide appropriate protective measures incorporated into the engineering of habitable spaces.
Here's a question I'd like the AI to answer for us:
By constructing Calliban's Superdome at the bottom of the open pit mine shown in Post #30, how much Solar Particle Event (SPE) / Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) / Galatic Cosmic Ray (GCR) radiation will the open pit mine block by erecting the dome at the bottom of the pit?
If the protection provided is still insufficient for humans, is it enough for the plants to survive all or most SPE / CME / GCR?
Maybe the humans will still need to temporarily seek more substantial shelter during a SPE / CME, presumably by evacuating to tunnels carved into the rock underneath the dome or into the walls of the pit. I'm thinking of the open pit mine as being somewhat akin to "castle walls", used to protect the people inside from powerful space-based radiation rather than invaders, but a castle nonetheless. The Superdome at the bottom is the castle's "keep"- for keeping the people inside warm / fed / clothed.
Erecting a giant dome is supposed to be a significant quality of life improvement for the settlers, so if it still gets sufficient sunlight to grow plants using fiber optics and/or mirrors arrayed around the pit, then perhaps the effort to dig the pit and erect the Superdome at the bottom of the pit still represents an acceptable energy trade for the long term security and psychological support of a miniature Earth-like environment.
tahanson43206,
A 2.5MWe Airloom device consumes 15t of materials in total ($225K) vs 435t for a HAWT. That means it's 29X more materials-efficient in a real physical sense (embodied energy efficiency) that no amount of money manipulation schemes could ever change. It does use modestly more land area for HAWT-equivalent power output, but there's no gigantic yet fragile tower and blades which may come crashing down due to high winds and/or manufacturing defects. The probability that far less highly-stressed components can actually last for 25 years or more is dramatically higher. Theoretically, the blades could be made from natural materials like bamboo. They may not be quite as light or durable as Carbon Fiber, but when the time inevitably comes for replacement they can be readily converted into other useful materials such as particle board filler. The race track poles consume far less concrete and steel per unit of power generated. Since the device can still work on uneven ground and doesn't absolutely require a service road to be laid down to assemble the machines in the field, it's a lower total investment for the same end result. Perhaps more important than all of that is the fact that it uses significantly less Copper or Aluminum wiring. We don't have access to infinite supplies of technology metals, here or elsewhere. 4X more power for the same total project cost is a massive "win". 1GWe nameplate capacity for $300M is practical, and the hardware cost is only $90M of the $300M total construction cost.
I looked into Airloom because their tech is potentially easier to implement at a scale that would actually matter. The wind turbine industry now consumes more composite and plastic materials than the entire aviation industry. Similarly, the data center / super computing industry now consumes more barrels of oil than the aviation industry.
A Red Eléctrica Report on the Spanish Grid Collapse of 28-APR-2025:
Incidente en el Sistema Eléctrico Peninsular Español el 28 de abril de 2025
INL removed the linked document in Post #370 from their website, or moved it, so here's an alternative link to the same document:
Conceptual design of a CERMET NTR fission core using multiphysics modeling techniques
Edit (in response to tahanson43206's question about the total number of coolant channels):
In this initial case, the fuel elements for both reactor configurations consisted of 37 coolant channels per fuel hex. Each reactor system was designed to have 6 lattice rows of fuel elements totaling 151 and the length of each reactor configuration was varied such that both systems had approximately the same drums out neutron multiplication number.
37 coolant channels per fuel element * 151 fuel elements = 5,587 coolant channels
SpaceNut,
That veteran was also never an American citizen. For whatever reason, his paperwork was never processed. Following his military service, he was convicted of attempted murder after discharging a firearm at someone during a house party, and sentenced to 52 years in prison. He was released on parole after 15 years. Following his early release from prison, his request for asylum was formally denied by an immigration judge. After you try to murder someone, it turns out that immigration judges are less understanding when it pertains to your asylum case.
I think it sucks that he was injured in combat, that he had PTSD as a result, and that he tried to murder someone. I've no idea why he did that because the article makes no mention of motivation or circumstances. I must assume that being sentenced to 52 years meant what he did was pretty horrific. It's awful, but that was what he chose to do with his earned freedom (in my opinion, which counts for very little) following his military service. The immigration judge did not feel that his actions merited US citizenship, which also sucks, but that is our system of governance in action. If you think someone who has served in our military should be granted citizenship, irrespective of any other considerations, then convince your representatives as to why automatic citizenship should be bestowed upon anyone who served in our military.
Should our government be compelled to care for the people they crushed in our military?
Maybe they should, but I think you'll find that the majority of people, certainly those in our government, want us to quietly go away after we've completed our service. The general public doesn't seem to know which box to put us in, almost as if we're broken toys they're no longer interested in playing with.
tahanson43206,
While the lunar surface is almost devoid of atmosphere, even the very thin wispy atmosphere of Mars is sufficient to hold a significant amount of dust in suspension. We could "pave over" the entire planet, but unless we construct a planetary-scale air filter, that suspended dust is still going to be there. There ought to be less dust afterwards, but without building and operating that air filter, all the dust already in the atmosphere is never going away. You may not experience dust storms that blot out the Sun, but that's the extent of what paving over the entire planet could achieve. Be that as it may, there's one guaranteed way to remove dust from the Martian atmosphere- evaporating enough water vapor to trap more heat from the Sun and cause precipitation. That's how entrained dust gets removed from Earth's atmosphere.
What you proposed should work for the moon, until the next significant asteroid strike, and then we're right back to square one. Why does the moon have so much fine abrasive powder all over its surface?... It's the natural result of all those asteroid strikes through the ages, but no significant atmosphere or liquid water to cause weathering.
We have to learn how to engineer-around this problem.
Cast basalt's tensile strength is 30-40MPa, roughly half that of any variety of oak wood. While it doesn't absorb water at all and is highly resistant to most acids and bases, which is great for chemical processing and brine transport, it's not particularly fond of large thermal shocks or very cold temperatures or impact loading. Those drawbacks may mean very little for this application or they might become stumbling blocks on Mars since we're operating outside of the normal environmental extremes encountered on Earth. Here on Earth steel mills frequently use cast basalt as a liner for chemical processing piping and waste stream removal. Some sewers and runoff systems also use basalt liners.
Basalt can be cast or carved into plates / bowls / coffee mugs, too:
Mexico makes their traditional molcajetes from hand-carved basalt.
I've seen sinks / wash basins, bathtubs, and various decorative pieces carved from basalt as well. Presumably, all tile flooring, sinks / tubs / toilets / shower stalls / drain pipes for bathrooms and kitchens, and most types of ceramic kitchenware could be made from cast basalt.
For structural applications, are there examples where cast basalt was selected for use here on Earth, just to show that it can be done and has been done before?
How might we improve upon basalt's tensile strength and other mechanical properties to something approaching a plain Carbon steel, if that's possible to do?
Could we add small amounts of Carbon Fiber to greatly enhance tensile strength?
We'd be processing the materials in an Oxygen-free near-vacuum atmosphere.
If that's not possible, can internally pressurized structures be kept in near-uniform compression using externally-applied loads, and how difficult is this to do in practice?
It seems as if that requires very careful engineering and construction, like weighing-out the overburden used to bury a basalt structure to guarantee the applied load matches the engineering calculations. How generous are the "fudge factors"? Maybe we can carve tunnels into bedrock and then use cast basalt tiles as abrasion and chemically resistant liners? That would mimic how we already use cast basalt as pipe liners here on Earth.
You have to heat up the basalt, and presumably the mold, to around 1,300C to pour it like liquid Iron. I don't know how fast you can cool molded basalt without cracking. Pure Iron melts at 1,538C. Inconel and stainless start to melt at temperatures remarkably similar to basalt. They retain much more of their room temperature strength at higher temperatures than plain Carbon steels, but their alloy content, which reduces high temperature oxidation, actually depresses their melting points. That's not a major difference in melting temperature between basalt and Iron, even though you also have to source coking coal or Hydrogen to make steel. I can see how sourcing other materials to make steel would easily consume a huge amount of energy, though. Steelmaking on Mars could end up being far more energy-intensive than it is here on Earth, so there's sound engineering and economic logic behind choosing a construction material with fewer processing steps and energy inputs. The actual energy savings may be more modest than Earth-based energy input averages would suggest, though, and it's likely to be the case that making any bulk construction material on Mars is energy intensive.
If we have to make cast basalt structures thicker and therefore heavier to approximate the tensile strength values of steels, then how much energy do we save?
Is the entire logistical tail required to make cast basalt easier to acquire and use for structural applications?
Either way, we're starting from scratch here. We obviously wouldn't be welding or cutting as much, nor splitting water to source Hydrogen to make steel, but we might need quite a few molds for all the castings (standardization is obviously key here), grinding and polishing to exact dimensions, adhesives with special properties to work in extreme cold to seal the structure, and specialized construction techniques to support above-ground structures before internal pressure can be applied.
Steel has been a staple of construction for the past two centuries, but that's because we have easy access to the energy inputs to mass produce it here on Earth. Perhaps a modern Mars civilization will be built with stone instead of steel.
tahanson43206,
Diameter of Cone at Merge with Throat (same thing as Throat Diameter): 2.5cm
Diameter of Rim (Nozzle Exit Diameter?): 25.232cm (radius * 2)
Length / Height of Frustum: 40.471cm
Divergence Angle of Nozzle: 15 degrees
Length / Height of the frustum is a derived value, yes, but does your student know how to derive it?
If I was working with a CAD software package, I would want to know Aexit and Divergence Angle to create a cone shape with the desired dimensions. From there, I can then figure out where to "slice the cone" for Athroat = 2.5cm^2, to give me the desired 200:1 expansion ratio. GW determined what the surface area of Athroat needed to be, roughly speaking, for the desired flow rate and pressure.
Using only Aexit = 500cm^2, Athroat = 2.5cm^2, and a 15 degree Nozzle Diverge Angle, presuming I know a little trigonometry to derive the height of the cone, meaning exit radius / triangle base length * tan(90-15) and formula to derive radius from the surface area of a circle, meaning sqrt(Aexit/pi), then I have all the info I need to create a frustum with the desired dimensions.
tahanson43206,
This document from Idaho National Laboratory describes XNR-2000's conceptual design:
Conceptual Design of a CERMET NTR Fission Core Using Multiphysics Modeling Techniques
It describes materials that were actually tested and proven to survive 3,000K temperatures while exposed to hot flowing Hydrogen. The total Hydrogen mass flow rate required to achieve a 25,000lbf thrust level, with an Isp of 950s using 512MWth of reactor power output, was 12.05kg/s. At the exhaust temperature / velocity associated with a 950s Isp, we'd therefore need 45,150,618Wth of input power per 1,000kg-f.
Edit:
The exact dimensions of a reactor will effect the magnitude of the volumetric energy deposition profile within the fission core; however the basic geometry is still the same. As an initiating point, the geometry of a slightly modified XNR-2000 reactor concept was chosen as a baseline. The XNR-2000 reactor design consists of 151 fuel elements, each with 37 coolant channels with a radius of 0.1778 cm and lined with a 0.025 cm thick W-25%Re cladding tube. The modified XNR-2000 core had a coolant channel surface area to fueled volume ratio of 7.0189. Each fuel element was surrounded with a 0.025 cm thick tungsten cladding sleeve. The reactor has a length of 90.69 cm and was surrounded by a 16.45 cm thick beryllium neutron reflector...
This idea that the core heating length needs to be kilometers long is completely bogus. I have no clue where it comes from.
Let's tally the total coolant flow channel volume.
0.1778cm^2 * pi * 90.69cm = 9.006847cm^3
9.006847cm^3 * 37 channels per fuel element = 333.253339cm^3
333.253339cm^3 * 151 fuel elements = 50,321.254189cm^3 (about 0.05m^3)
50,321.254189cm^3 / 12.05kg/s = 4,176.037692cm^3 per 1kg/s
The above is not exact since there's a power density difference in different core regions, but it's close enough.
50,321.254189cm^3 / 512MWth = 98.2837cm^3 to transfer 1MWth
1kg/s produces 941.064kg-f, so 1.063kg/s produces 1,000kg-f at 950s.
Let's say we did use a singular tube to transfer core thermal power, for whatever good that would do for us:
151 fuel rods * 37 coolant channels per fuel rod * 90.69cm core length = 506,685.03cm
506,685.03cm / 12 = 42,223.7525cm = 422.237525m
If we had a mere 37 individual coolant channels to mimic a single fuel rod, then the length of each heat transfer tube is 11.412m. Presumably, we can manage a heat transfer tube length of 1m with 422 heat transfer tubes. If each tube was "touching", then the width of a planar heat transfer device is only 150cm across. Obviously we'd need spacing between tubes to contain the pressurized Hydrogen, but it's pretty easy to determine that a planar device with 422X 1m length heat transfer tubes is far less than 1m in width. If the thickness of this "hot plate" was 2X that of the tube diameter, then it's only 7.112mm thick. The device could be made from Tungsten and its total mass still wouldn't matter all that much to the performance of this low-thrust vehicle.
If we had a "hollow cylinder" (aka, "a pipe") device with a bunch of heat transfer pipes drilled through the pipe wall, with a gas manifold on each end, somewhat similar in external appearance to a NTR reactor core, but with a big empty space where the reactor fuel would normally go, then we ought to arrive at a mass / volume / length remarkably similar to an "empty" NTR reactor core (since our heat is being applied externally by concentrated sunlight, rather than generated internally through fissioning Uranium).
tahanson43206,
You asked about the thermal analysis for the core, so let's start with this NTRS document from 2016 related to recent work done by NASA on their new "small engine" NTR concept:
Thermal Hydraulics Design and Analysis Methodology for a Solid-Core Nuclear Thermal Rocket Engine Thrust Chamber
tahanson43206,
Assuming I did this correctly, which I may not have since it's been about 20 years since I took trig...
For a 200:1 expansion ratio, given Athroat = 2.5cm^2 Athroat, then Aexit = 500cm^2.
r = sqrt(A/pi)
sqrt(2.5cm^2/pi) = ~1.772cm
sqrt(500cm^2/pi) = ~12.616cm
GW said keep the nozzle wall angle between 12 and 15 degrees to minimize erosion, so I'm going with 15 degrees:
base * tan(90-15) = height
12.616 * tan(75) = 47.084cm
1.772 * tan(75) = 6.613cm
47.084cm - 6.613cm = 40.471cm = height of the frustum (nozzle length)
I've seen that posted all over the internet. The amount of energy represented there is wild. The power output of 10 trillion Suns is a number so great that I have a hard time visualizing / comparing it with hyper-giant stars. UY Scuti is one of the largest / most powerful known stars. There may be a few larger known stars, but I know that one is pretty far up the list. The power output of 10 trillion Suns is over 29,000,000X greater than UY Scuti, so the "energy beam" emanating from that black hole is 7 orders of magnitude greater than the power output of any known hyper-giant star. I wonder how far you'd need to be from that energy beam to not get "atomically deconstructed" by it, and how much matter it must have consumed to generate that much power.
Anyone who wants to analyze a nozzle design can do so using the 3 software packages from the links I provided in my prior post in this thread, but you will need to know some design fundamentals- terminology, the basic equations involved in nozzle design, some gas and combustion kinetic fundamentals applicable to chemical rocket engines, etc.
I realize that our particular design problem only involves Hydrogen as a monopropellant used to produce NTR-like Isp using photonic power from the Sun, yet nearly all of the fundamentals still apply. Combustion kinetics won't apply since this engine does not use combustion to generate heat, but still useful for general understanding of liquid rocket engine nozzle design. GW can tell you if there are any major differences in solid vs liquid nozzle design considerations, but I think combustion kinetics would affect the design differently since combustion begins inside a rather lengthy motor casing and propellant grain geometry differences greatly affect reaction rates and thrust.
As a monopropellant, Hydrogen has some unique thermal properties and at the temperatures involved, hot flowing Hydrogen would cause a severe chemical attack against certain kinds of materials, especially metals, but the materials I specified are known to be resistant to that attack from the work NASA performed for the ROVER / NERVA Nuclear Thermal Rocket engine programs. Specifically, Hydrogen has the highest heat capacity of any element, a bit over 14.3kJ/kgK at or near room temperature. That's another way of saying it requires an enormous amount of heat energy input to raise the temperature of 2kg of H2 (the mass flow rate we previously agreed was necessary to achieve our thrust target) from 20K to 3,000K.
RocketIsp - Rocket Nozzle Design Software
Edit (in response to the questions posed by tahanson43206 during our last Sunday meeting):
Rocketisp uses a simplified JANNAF approach to calculate delivered specific impulse (Isp) for liquid rocket thrust chambers.
Note that RocketIsp gets propellant properties from the companion project RocketProps and ideal Isp performance from the companion project RocketCEA.
The Geometry object holds all the major thrust chamber geometry values. The code snippet below shows how to create a Geometry object, and the definition of all the parameters.

Edit #2:
JANNAF Standard
In 1975, the John Hopkins University, Applied Physics Laboratory published CPIA 246 in conjunction with JANNAF (Joint Army-Navy-NASA-Air Force) titled Rocket Engine Performance Test Data Acquisition and Interpretation Manual
CPIA 246 JANNAF Rocket Engine Performance Prediction and Evaluation Manual established a US national standard for the analytical and experimental evaluation of the performance of liquid propellant rocket engines and is a result of the work by the Interagency Chemical Rocket Propulsion Group (ICRPG) formed in 1962. In 1973, NASA-CR-131519 was published to discuss the history of the ICRPG meetings that led to CPIA 246 and to summarize the selected model approaches.
In 1977, Aerojet Liquid Rocket Company (ALRC), now known as Aerojet Rocketdyne, published an update to CPIA 246 entitled Analysis of rocket engine injection combustion processes that reflects on-going improvements to the models and software used to implement the “standard” JANNAF model. The Aerojet report also indicates that, in 1977, the JANNAF model, in general, could not yet achieve a 1% accuracy on predicting Isp without the help of test data.
There are two model approaches offered by JANNAF, a rigorous model and a simplified model.
The radiation plume would've been a significant problem, but I feel like the overpressure effects from supersonic flight are a bit exaggerated. Back when the Air Force was still studying this, researchers were uninjured by a 144psf overpressure produced by a supersonic F-4 flying 100ft overhead.
Roughly speaking, Project Pluto envisioned a F-4 mass vehicle (61,000lbs), albeit with significantly improved aerodynamics, moving at Mach 3 at low-level only for the penetration run into Soviet airspace, using its 513MWth / 35,000lbf engine. However, this nuclear ramjet powered "cruise missile" would've flown at much greater altitudes while loitering and cruising into the target area. Its onboard autopilot would direct the weapon to descend to treetop level only upon entering enemy airspace. As far as "unlimited range" is concerned, that should be heavily qualified. Range was estimated to be around 113,000 miles, so this thing could "only" fly around at Mach 3 for two days or so before the reactor core suffered too much thermal damage and/or the fuel was depleted to the point of no longer able to maintain Mach 3 flight speeds. Perhaps the weapon could fly over longer distances at reduced speeds and temperatures, but the notion of it staying aloft for a month or more was mostly fantasy.


How or why this weapon would ever be more useful or more lethal than a conventional ICBM equipped with a dozen MIRV warheads is beyond my understanding. ICBMs reach their targets in less than 20 minutes, regardless of where they're launched from, and travel at speeds far beyond Mach 3. To this day, there are very few known-effective defenses against ICBMs. Successful interceptor weapons typically cost more than the nuclear warheads / ICBMs they're being fired at. There have been many successful interceptions of much smaller sea-skimming supersonic (Mach 2-3) anti-ship cruise missiles and target drones.