Fracture Control for Additive Manufactured Spacecraft StructuresFinal Paper is attached. This paper discusses how the intent of current NASA fracture control requirements may be applied to "fracture critical" additive manufactured spacecraft hardware. Fracture control is a multi-discipline design and certification methodology that is applied in order to mitigate catastrophic failure of structures resulting from growth of an undetected crack-like defect. The methodology is defined in existing spacecraft standards and is required by NASA on all human-rated space structures. Recently, standards have been published by NASA to define materials and processes requirements for certain metallic additive manufactured hardware, but procedures for fracture control implementation on additive manufactured parts are not yet addressed in detail in any standard or guidance document.The discussion contained herein is necessary at this time as new guidance in this area should be founded collaboratively by the technical community at large including industry, academia, and government. Three Fracture Control Certification Methods are proposed for discussion. Additionally, a concept for "Design for AM fracture control" is introduced. The goals of this paper are to further expose the need for maturing additive manufacturing fracture control guidance in the spacecraft industry and to generate discussion on what this guidance should consist of.
Document ID
20190032236
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
McElroy, Mark (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Patin, Raymond (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Luna, Sarah (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
October 23, 2019
Publication Date
October 21, 2019
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing And PerformanceComposite Materials