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Solar Array at Very High Temperatures: Ground TestsSolar array design for any spacecraft is determined by the orbit parameters. For example, operational voltage for spacecraft in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) is limited by significant differential charging due to interactions with low temperature plasma. In order to avoid arcing in LEO, solar array is designed to generate electrical power at comparatively low voltages (below 100 V) or to operate at higher voltages with encapsulated of all suspected discharge locations. In Geosynchronous Orbit (GEO) differential charging is caused by energetic electrons that produce differential potential between coverglass and conductive spacecraft body in a kilovolt range. In such a case, weakly conductive layer over coverglass (ITO) is one of possible measures to eliminate dangerous discharges on array surface. Temperature variations for solar arrays in both orbits are measured and documented within the range of -150 C +110 C. This wide interval of operational temperatures is regularly reproduced in ground tests with radiative heating and cooling inside shroud with flowing liquid nitrogen. The requirements to solar array design and tests turn out to be more complicated when planned trajectory crosses these two orbits and goes closer to Sun. Conductive layer over coverglass causes sharp increase in parasitic current collected from LEO plasma, high temperature may cause cracks in encapsulating material (RTV), radiative heating of coupon in vacuum chamber becomes practically impossible above 150 C, conductivities of glass and adhesive go up with temperature that decrease array efficiency, and mechanical stresses grow up to critical magnitudes. A few test arrangements and respective results are presented in current paper. Coupons were tested against arcing in simulated LEO and GEO environments under elevated temperatures up to 200 C. The dependence of leakage current on temperature was measured, and electrostatic cleanness was verified for coupons with antireflection (AR) coating over ITO layer.
Document ID
20160010349
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Vayner, Boris
(Ohio Aerospace Inst. Cleveland, OH, United States)
Date Acquired
August 15, 2016
Publication Date
April 4, 2016
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing And Performance
Electronics And Electrical Engineering
Report/Patent Number
GRC-E-DAA-TN30127
Report Number: GRC-E-DAA-TN30127
Meeting Information
Meeting: Spacecraft Charging Technology Conference
Location: Noordwijk
Country: Netherlands
Start Date: April 4, 2016
End Date: April 8, 2016
Sponsors: European Space Agency. European Space Research and Technology Center, ESTEC
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 388443.01.04.01
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNC13BA10B
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
differential charging
solar arrays
arcing
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