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A heater made from graphite composite material for potential deicing applicationA surface heater was developed using a graphite fiber-epoxy composite as the heating element. This heater can be thin, highly electrically and thermally conductive, and can conform to an irregular surface. Therefore it may be used in an aircraft's thermal deicing system to quickly and uniformly heat the aircraft surface. One-ply of unidirectional graphite fiber-epoxy composite was laminated between two plies of fiber glass-epoxy composite, with nickel foil contacting the end portions of the composite and partly exposed beyond the composites for electrical contact. The model heater used brominated P-100 fibers from Amoco. The fiber's electrical resistivity, thermal conductivity and density were 50 micro ohms per centimenter, 270 W/m-K and 2.30 gm/cubic cm, respectively. The electricity was found to penetrate through the composite in the transverse direction to make an acceptably low foil-composite contact resistance. When conducting current, the heater temperature increase reached 50 percent of the steady state value within 20 sec. There was no overheating at the ends of the heater provided there was no water corrosion. If the foil-composite bonding failed during storage, liquid water exposure was found to oxidize the foil. Such bonding failure may be avoided if perforated nickel foil is used, so that the composite plies can bond to each other through the perforated holes and therefore lock the foil in place.
Document ID
19870037631
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Hung, Ching-Cheh
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Dillehay, Michael E.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Stahl, Mark
(Cleveland State University OH, United States)
Date Acquired
August 13, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1987
Subject Category
Aircraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
AIAA PAPER 87-0025
Report Number: AIAA PAPER 87-0025
Accession Number
87A24905
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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