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Development and test of the Shuttle/Centaur cryogenic tankage thermal protection systemThe Thermal Protection System (TPS) for the Shuttle/Centaur had to provide fail-safe thermal protection during prelaunch, launch ascent, and on-orbit operations as well as during potential abort where the Shuttle and Centaur would return to earth. The TPS selected used a helium-purged polyimide foam beneath three radiation shields for the liquid hydrogen (LH2) tank and radiation shields only for the liquid oxygen (LO2) tank (three shields on the tank sidewall and four on the aft bulkhead). An evacuated common intermediate bulkhead separated the two tanks. The LH2 tank had one 1.9-cm thick layer of foam on the forward bulkhead and two layers on the larger area side-wall. Full scale tests of the flight vehicle in a simulated Shuttle cargo bay, that was purged with gaseous nitrogen, gave total prelaunch heating rates of 25.9 kW and 12.9 kW for LH2 and LO2 tanks, respectively. Calorimeter tests on a representative LH2 tank sidewall TPS sample indicated that the measured unit heating rate would rapidly decrease from the prelaunch rate of 300 W/sq m to a desired rate of less than 4 W/sq m once on-orbit.
Document ID
19870055799
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Knoll, R. H.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
England, J. E.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Macneil, P. N.
(General Dynamics Corp. Space Systems Div., San Diego, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 13, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1987
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
AIAA PAPER 87-1557
Accession Number
87A43073
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS3-22901
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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