Resin-Impregnated Carbon Ablator: A New Ablative Material for Hyperbolic Entry Speeds
TBMG-14610
09/01/2012
- Content
Ablative materials are required to protect a space vehicle from the extreme temperatures encountered during the most demanding (hyperbolic) atmospheric entry velocities, either for probes launched toward other celestial bodies, or coming back to Earth from deep space missions. To that effect, the resinimpregnated carbon ablator (RICA) is a high-temperature carbon/phenolic ablative thermal protection system (TPS) material designed to use modern and commercially viable components in its manufacture. Heritage carbon/phenolic ablators intended for this use rely on materials that are no longer in production (i.e., Galileo, Pioneer Venus); hence the development of alternatives such as RICA is necessary for future NASA planetary entry and Earth re-entry missions. RICA’s capabilities were initially measured in air for Earth re-entry applications, where it was exposed to a heat flux of 14 MW/m2 for 22 seconds. Methane tests were also carried out for potential application in Saturn’s moon Titan, with a nominal heat flux of 1.4 MW/m2for up to 478 seconds. Three slightly different material formulations were manufactured and subsequently tested at the Plasma Wind Tunnel of the University of Stuttgart in Germany (PWK1) in the summer and fall of 2010. The TPS’ integrity was well preserved in most cases, and results show great promise.
- Citation
- "Resin-Impregnated Carbon Ablator: A New Ablative Material for Hyperbolic Entry Speeds," Mobility Engineering, September 1, 2012.