Propellant mass fraction
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In aerospace engineering, the propellant mass fraction is the portion of a vehicle's mass which does not reach the destination, usually used as a measure of the vehicle's performance. In other words, the propellant mass fraction is the ratio between the propellant mass and the initial mass of the vehicle. In a spacecraft, the destination is usually an orbit, while for aircraft it is their landing location. A higher mass fraction represents less weight in a design. Another related measure is the payload fraction, which is the fraction of initial weight that is payload. It can be applied to a vehicle, a stage of a vehicle or to a rocket propulsion system.


Formulation

The propellant mass fraction is given by: \begin \zeta &= \frac \\ pt &= \frac = \frac \\ &= 1 - \frac \end where: *\zeta is the propellant mass fraction *m_0 = m_\text + m_\text is the initial mass of the vehicle *m_\text is the propellant mass *m_\text is the final mass of the vehicle


Significance

In
rocket A rocket (from it, rocchetto, , bobbin/spool) is a vehicle that uses jet propulsion to accelerate without using the surrounding air. A rocket engine produces thrust by reaction to exhaust expelled at high speed. Rocket engines work entir ...
s for a given target
orbit In celestial mechanics, an orbit is the curved trajectory of an object such as the trajectory of a planet around a star, or of a natural satellite around a planet, or of an artificial satellite around an object or position in space such as ...
, a rocket's mass fraction is the portion of the rocket's pre-launch mass (fully fueled) that does not reach orbit. The propellant mass fraction is the ratio of just the propellant to the entire mass of the vehicle at takeoff (propellant plus dry mass). In the cases of a single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) vehicle or suborbital vehicle, the mass fraction equals the propellant mass fraction, which is simply the fuel mass divided by the mass of the full spaceship. A rocket employing staging, which are the only designs to have reached orbit, has a mass fraction higher than the propellant mass fraction because parts of the rocket itself are dropped off en route. Propellant mass fractions are typically around 0.8 to 0.9. In aircraft, mass fraction is related to range, an aircraft with a higher mass fraction can go farther. Aircraft mass fractions are typically around 0.5. When applied to a rocket as a whole, a low mass fraction is desirable, since it indicates a greater capability for the rocket to deliver payload to orbit for a given amount of fuel. Conversely, when applied to a single stage, where the propellant mass fraction calculation doesn't include the payload, a higher propellant mass fraction corresponds to a more efficient design, since there is less non-propellant mass. Without the benefit of staging, SSTO designs are typically designed for mass fractions around 0.9. Staging increases the payload fraction, which is one of the reasons SSTOs appear difficult to build. For example, the complete Space Shuttle system has:Typical propellant mass fractions
* fueled weight at liftoff: 1,708,500 kg * dry weight at liftoff: 342,100 kg Given these numbers, the propellant mass fraction is 1 - (342,100\text/1,708,500\text) = 0.7998. The mass fraction plays an important role in the
rocket equation A rocket (from it, rocchetto, , bobbin/spool) is a vehicle that uses jet propulsion to accelerate without using the surrounding air. A rocket engine produces thrust by reaction to exhaust expelled at high speed. Rocket engines work entirely ...
: :\Delta v = -v_\text \ln\frac Where m_\text/m_0 is the ratio of final mass to initial mass (i.e., one minus the mass fraction), \Delta v is the change in the vehicle's velocity as a result of the fuel burn and v_\text is the effective exhaust velocity (see below). The term effective exhaust velocity is defined as: :v_\text = g_\text I_\text where ''I''sp is the fuel's specific impulse in seconds and ''g''n is the ''standard acceleration of gravity'' (note that this is not the local acceleration of gravity). To make a powered landing from orbit on a celestial body without an atmosphere requires the same mass reduction as reaching orbit from its surface, if the speed at which the surface is reached is zero.


See also

* Fuel fraction * Mass ratio


References

{{reflist Astrodynamics Mass Single-stage-to-orbit Rocket propulsion ro:Fracţie masică