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Dust Tolerant Commodity Transfer Interface Mechanisms for Planetary SurfacesRegolith is present on most planetary surfaces such as Earth's moon, Mars, and Asteroids. If human crews and robotic machinery are to operate on these regolith covered surfaces, they must face the consequences of interacting with regolith fines which consist of particles below 100 microns in diameter down to as small as submicron scale particles. Such fine dust will intrude into mechanisms and interfaces causing a variety of problems such as contamination of clean fluid lines, jamming of mechanisms and damaging connector seals and couplings. Since multiple elements must be assembled in space for system level functionality, it will be inevitable that interfaces will be necessary for structural connections, and to pass commodities such as cryogenic liquid propellants, purge and buffer gases, water, breathing air, pressurizing gases, heat exchange fluids, power and data. When fine regolith dust is present in the environment it can be lofted into interfaces where it can compromise the utility of the interface by preventing the connections from being successfully mated, or by inducing fluid leaks or degradation of power and data transmission. A dust tolerant, hand held "quick-disconnect" cryogenic fluids connector housing has been developed at NASA KSC which can be used by astronaut crews to connect flex lines that will transfer propellants and other useful fluids to the end user. In addition, a dust tolerant, automated, cryogenic fluid, multiple connector, power and data interface mechanism prototype has been developed, fabricated and demonstrated by NASA at Kennedy Space Center (KSC). The design and operation of these prototypes are explained and discussed.
Document ID
20150000177
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Townsend, Ivan I.
(Craig Technologies Cape Canaveral, FL, United States)
Mueller, Robert P.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL United States)
Tamasy, Gabor J.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL United States)
Date Acquired
January 5, 2015
Publication Date
October 27, 2014
Subject Category
Space Transportation And Safety
Spacecraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
KSC-E-DAA-TN17243
Meeting Information
Meeting: ASCE International Conference on Engineering, Science, Construction and Operations in Challenging Environments (Earth and Space 2014)
Location: St. Louis, MO
Country: United States
Start Date: October 27, 2014
End Date: October 29, 2014
Sponsors: American Society of Civil Engineers
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNK11EA08C
WBS: WBS 295670.01.01.13.07
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
Dust Tolerant
Umbilicals
Connectors
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