ISS Internal Active Thermal Control System (IATCS) Coolant Remediation Project - 2006 Update

2006-01-2161

07/17/2006

Event
International Conference On Environmental Systems
Authors Abstract
Content
The IATCS coolant has experienced a number of anomalies in the time since the US Lab was first activated on Flight 5A in February 2001. These have included: 1) a decrease in coolant pH, 2) increases in inorganic carbon, 3) a reduction in phosphate concentration, 4) an increase in dissolved nickel and precipitation of nickel salts, and 5) increases in microbial concentration. These anomalies represent some risk to the system, have been implicated in some hardware failures and are suspect in others. The ISS program has conducted extensive investigations of the causes and effects of these anomalies and has developed a comprehensive program to remediate the coolant chemistry of the on-orbit system as well as provide a robust and compatible coolant solution for the hardware yet to be delivered. This paper presents a status of the coolant stability over the past year as well as results from destructive analyses of hardware removed from the on-orbit system and the current approach to coolant remediation.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-01-2161
Pages
15
Citation
Morrison, R., and Holt, M., "ISS Internal Active Thermal Control System (IATCS) Coolant Remediation Project - 2006 Update," SAE Technical Paper 2006-01-2161, 2006, https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-01-2161.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jul 17, 2006
Product Code
2006-01-2161
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English