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Status of the Development of Low Cost Radiator for Surface Fission Power - II
by
Maxwell, Taylor
, Anderson, William G
, Wagner, Corey
, Wrosch, Matthew
, Briggs, Maxwell H
, Tarau, Calin
in
Aluminum
/ Clusters
/ Fiber composites
/ Ground tests
/ Heat pipes
/ Heat radiators
/ Mars surface
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Resistance
/ Saddles
/ Vacuum chambers
/ Waste heat
2016
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Status of the Development of Low Cost Radiator for Surface Fission Power - II
by
Maxwell, Taylor
, Anderson, William G
, Wagner, Corey
, Wrosch, Matthew
, Briggs, Maxwell H
, Tarau, Calin
in
Aluminum
/ Clusters
/ Fiber composites
/ Ground tests
/ Heat pipes
/ Heat radiators
/ Mars surface
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Resistance
/ Saddles
/ Vacuum chambers
/ Waste heat
2016
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Do you wish to request the book?
Status of the Development of Low Cost Radiator for Surface Fission Power - II
by
Maxwell, Taylor
, Anderson, William G
, Wagner, Corey
, Wrosch, Matthew
, Briggs, Maxwell H
, Tarau, Calin
in
Aluminum
/ Clusters
/ Fiber composites
/ Ground tests
/ Heat pipes
/ Heat radiators
/ Mars surface
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Resistance
/ Saddles
/ Vacuum chambers
/ Waste heat
2016
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Status of the Development of Low Cost Radiator for Surface Fission Power - II
Conference Proceeding
Status of the Development of Low Cost Radiator for Surface Fission Power - II
2016
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Overview
NASA Glenn Research Center (GRC) is developing fission power system technology for future Lunar and Martian surface power applications. The systems are envisioned in the 10 to 100kWe range and have an anticipated design life of 8 to 15 years with no maintenance. NASA GRC is currently setting up a 55 kWe non-nuclear system ground test in thermal-vacuum to validate technologies required to transfer reactor heat, convert the heat into electricity, reject waste heat, process the electrical output, and demonstrate overall system performance. The paper reports on the development of the heat pipe radiator to reject the waste heat from the Stirling convertors. Reducing the radiator mass, size, and cost is essential to the success of the program. To meet these goals, Advanced Cooling Technologies, Inc. (ACT) and Vanguard Space Technologies, Inc. (VST) are developing a single facesheet radiator with heat pipes directly bonded to the facesheet. The facesheet material is a graphite fiber reinforced composite (GFRC) and the heat pipes are titanium/water Variable Conductance Heat Pipes (VCHPs). By directly bonding a single facesheet to the heat pipes, several heavy and expensive components can be eliminated from the traditional radiator design such as, POCO\"TM\" foam saddles, aluminum honeycomb, and a second facesheet. As mentioned in previous papers by the authors, the final design of the waste heat radiator is described as being modular with independent GFRC panels for each heat pipe. The present paper reports on test results for a single radiator module as well as a radiator cluster consisting of eight integral modules. These tests were carried out in both ambient and vacuum conditions. While the vacuum testing of the single radiator module was performed in the ACT's vacuum chamber, the vacuum testing of the eight heat pipe radiator cluster took place in NASA GRC's vacuum chamber to accommodate the larger size of the cluster. The results for both articles show good agreement with the predictions and are presented in the paper.
Publisher
NASA/Langley Research Center
Subject
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