Aero wrote:I think we can agree to disagree. That is one thing that differentiates a myth from an accepted fact. So the myth is established.
Myth - "A hot water heater properly configured can deliver enough rocket thrust to launch itself into space."
I think we can agree that a
hot water heater, meaning in the sense of a myth a standard common domestic hot water heater "configured" by the sort of bodging and neglect a typical homeowner might do, can't launch itself into space.
Your contention is that a rocket could be built that consists of a pressure vessel capable of holding the same amount of superheated, pressurized water that a malfunctioning DHW tank could, plus appropriate plumbing to transfer the steam generated to a properly size De Laval nozzle to provide thrust, and that rocket, powered by nothing more than the energy content of the superheated pressurized water, could reach space.
You seemed to feel that the water flashing to steam would maintain a constant pressure head, thus allowing the nozzle to operate at a continuous high Isp and high thrust until almost all the water was used as reaction mass. And that most of the latent energy of the superheated water would be converted to thrust.
I disagree. I feel that a significant portion of the energy in the superheated water would go into the water->steam phase change. Water has a relatively high heat of vaporization.
Here's a more down-to-earth example: The last time I used "canned air" to cool down some computer components, the can was full of a compressed liquid propellant, which when I opened the valve flashed to vapor and escaped out the tube blasting the inside of my case with a fast air stream, cooling the overheated components and making the dust-bunnies scurry for cover. The situation in that can is analogous to the steam rocket: a pressure vessel filled with a fluid which was liquid at that temperature solely because it was under high pressure. When the container was opened via the valve, the liquid flashed to vapor and escaped at high pressure with some force.
My experience with that, and similar situations with liquid propane tanks, tells me that the steam rocket won't work: Before I was fully done getting the dust out of the fan blades and heat sinks of my computer (and verifying that the power supply fan would move freely in an air-stream, but not when supposedly powered by the power supply), the can was (a) cold enough for frost to form on it, (b) no longer capable of producing a stream of "air", and (c) not empty yet, as could be determined by the sloshing of the contents. Similarly, it is well known that liquid propane tanks, after long use, also chill to the point of no longer working because the contents are too cold to vaporize.
The only solution is to provide external heat to bring them back up to operating temperature (the recommended way is to close the valves and let the ambient air temperature provide the heat; don't put a cold can of "air" or a cold propane tank on a fire).
I feel that the same will happen with a superheated water->steam rocket: It will work well for a while, but the vaporization of the water to produce the steam will sap energy (and thus temperature) from the water to the point where it simply will no longer vaporize at tank pressure.
I think this is what KitemanSA was getting at when he was saying that the total energy content of the water was sufficient to vaporize half the water.