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Microgravity Electrical Capacitance Tomography Data SetPropellants mass gauging technologies designed to work in an accelerated environment, where the propellant remains settled at one end of the propellant tank, do not work well in a microgravity environment because the propellant is not necessarily settled. While some microgravity mass gauging technologies exist at various TRLs, most of them have major disadvantages. Improvements in microgravity propellant mass gauging will result in improvements to many areas of propellant management, which influences performance and mission assurance. Electrical Capacitance Tomography (ECT) is a sensing technology that has been used in the oil/gas industry for decades to measure multi-phase flow rate in pipes. ECT, when installed in a tank, is able to reconstruct the liquid distribution inside of the tank, which can then be integrated to obtain mass. ECT mass gauging recently achieved high accuracy in laboratory testing on the ground, and while ECT mass gauging will theoretically work during all phases of flight, it had not yet been tested in microgravity. The NASA KSC Launch Services Program, with support from the Flight Opportunities Program, successfully flew an ECT tank liquid mass gauging system experiment on a Zero-G parabolic flight aircraft. The experiment hardware was rented from a company; NASA LSP did no technology development work for this project. This STRIVES entry is for the entire raw data set, which consists of approximately 25GB of csv files of capacitance and motion data from the ground and flight tests of the experiment.

The data set will be available on the NASA LSP Electronic Slosh Data Catalog (ESDC), and the public may request the data set from the authors (POC: Jed Storey, jedediah.m.nasa.gov).
Document ID
20220014348
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Jedediah Morse Storey
(Kennedy Space Center Merritt Island, Florida, United States)
Brandon Steven Marsell
(Kennedy Space Center Merritt Island, Florida, United States)
Michael Elmore
(AI Solutions Lanham, Maryland, United States)
Scott Randall Clark
(AI Solutions Lanham, Maryland, United States)
Date Acquired
September 21, 2022
Publication Date
October 10, 2022
Publication Information
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Thermodynamics
Spacecraft Instrumentation And Astrionics
Spacecraft Propulsion And Power
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 725932.08.03.01.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
NASA Peer Committee
Keywords
mass gauging
electrical capacitance tomography
slosh

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