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Development of the Orion Crew-Service Module Umbilical Retention and Release MechanismThe Orion CSM umbilical retention and release mechanism supports and protects all of the cross-module commodities between the spacecrafts crew and service modules. These commodities include explosive transfer lines, wiring for power and data, and flexible hoses for ground purge and life support systems. The mechanism employs a single separation interface which is retained with pyrotechnically actuated separation bolts and supports roughly two dozen electrical and fluid connectors. When module separation is commanded, either for nominal on-orbit CONOPS or in the event of an abort, the mechanism must release the separation interface and sever all commodity connections within milliseconds of command receipt. There are a number of unique and novel aspects of the design solution developed by the Orion mechanisms team. The design is highly modular and can easily be adapted to other vehiclesmodules and alternate commodity sets. It will be flight tested during Orions Exploration Flight Test 1 (EFT-1) in 2014, and the Orion team anticipates reuse of the design for all future missions. The design packages fluid, electrical, and ordnance disconnects in a single separation interface. It supports abort separations even in cases where aerodynamic loading prevents the deployment of the umbilical arm. Unlike the Apollo CSM umbilical which was a destructive separation device, the Orion design is resettable and flight units can be tested for separation performance prior to flight.Initial development testing of the mechanisms separation interface resulted in binding failures due to connector misalignments. The separation interface was redesigned with a robust linear guide system, and the connector separation and boom deployment were separated into two discretely sequenced events. These changes addressed the root cause of the binding failure by providing better control of connector alignment. The new design was tuned and validated analytically via Monte Carlo simulation. The analytical validation was followed by a repeat of the initial test suite plus test cases at thermal extremes and test cases with imposed mechanical failures demonstrating fault tolerance. The mechanism was then exposed to the qualification vibration environment. Finally, separation testing was performed at full speed with live ordnance.All tests of the redesigned mechanism resulted in successful separation of the umbilical interface with adequate force margins and timing. The test data showed good agreement with the predictions of the Monte Carlo simulation. The simulation proved invaluable due to the number of variables affecting the separation and the uncertainty associated with each. The simulation allowed for rapid assessment of numerous trades and contingency scenarios, and can be easily reconfigured for varying commodity sets and connector layouts.
Document ID
20140006739
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Delap, Damon C.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Glidden, Joel Micah
(Lockheed Martin Corp. Denver, CO, United States)
Lamoreaux, Christopher
(Lockheed Martin Corp. Denver, CO, United States)
Date Acquired
June 4, 2014
Publication Date
September 27, 2013
Subject Category
Mechanical Engineering
Report/Patent Number
GRC-E-DAA-TN11171
Meeting Information
Meeting: European Space Mechanisms and Tribology Symposium 2013
Location: Noordwijk
Country: Netherlands
Start Date: September 25, 2013
End Date: September 27, 2013
Sponsors: European Space Agency
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 747797.06.11.99.03
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNJ06TA25C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
Separation
Umbilical
Mechanisms
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