Expandable pulse power spacecraft radiator

4727932
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Inventors

Mahefkey, Edward T.

Application #

875808

Filed

Jun-18-1986

Published

Mar-1-1988

Current US Class

165/104.26
165/41
165/46
165/86
244/163

International Classes

B64G 001/50; F28D 015/02

Field of Search

165/41 165/46 165/104.26 165/86

Assignee

The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Air (Washington, DC)

Examiners

Davis, Jr.; Albert W.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Scearce; Bobby D., Singer; Donald J.

US Patent References

3931532   Thermoelectric pow...
4000776   Heat pipe system
4003427   Heat pipe fabrication
4212347   Unfurlable heat pipe
4313492   Micro helix thermo...
4402358   Heat pipe thermal...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

L. C. Chow et al, "Low Temperature Expandale Megawatt Pulse Radiator", Proceedings of the 1985 AIAA Thermophysics Conference (Jun. 19-21. 1985).

Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
An expandable heat rejection system for radiating heat generated by a source of heat on a spacecraft or like vehicle is described and comprises a fluid heat exchange medium in operative heat exchange contact with the source for absorbing heat by evaporation of the liquid phase of the medium, a thin flexible wall structure having an inlet and an outlet and defining a volume expandable and collapsible between preselected limits and defining an inner condensation surface and an outer heat radiating surface, a multiplicity of capillary grooves on the condensation surface for promoting condensation of vaporous medium and for facilitating flow of condensate along the condensation surface toward the outlet, and a pump for circulating the medium through the system.
 
Claims
I claim:

1. A heat rejection system for temporarily storing and radiating heat generated by a source of heat on a spacecraft or like vehicle, comprising:

(a) a fluid heat exchange medium for contacting said source in operative heat exchange relationship with said source, said medium comprising a fluid material for absorbing heat by conversion of said medium from the liquid phase of said medium to the vapor phase of said medium;

(b) means defining an expandable and collapsible volume having an inlet and an outlet, said volume defining means including an extensible and retractable sleeve, said sleeve being coilable along the length thereof, and comprising a thin flexible film defining along a first edge of said sleeve a first passageway communicating with said inlet and along a second edge opposite said first edge a second passageway communicating with said outlet, said sleeve further defining between said first passageway and said second passageway and along said length of said sleeve a region of said volume defined by confronting inner surfaces of said film defining condensation surfaces for said medium, the outer surfaces of said film defining heat radiating surfaces for said sleeve;



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to systems for radiating heat from spacecraft or the like, and more particularly to a variable, deployable heat exchange radiator for a spacecraft providing high peak to average heat rejection.

The profile of a power demand duty cycle of a space mission may include periods of high power draw over short times interspersed with much longer periods when power is needed at only a low level. The pulse duration, amplitude and frequency are determined by mission applications. Conventional spacecraft radiators are sized to reject peak power waste heat loads, and turned down to reject power loads during off peak portions of a duty cycle. Conventional radiators are capable of near constant load thermal control over a range of nominally 10:1 peak to average heat loads for steady state head rejection. However, for high power applications requiring high peak to average heat rejection capability wherein system weight is constrained, conventional radiator designs are of limited utility.
 
  A sphere which provides a high emissivity, uniform, isothermal calibration ource which is fully instrumented for surface temperature and range measurements....  An expandable heat rejection system for radiating heat generated by a source of heat on a spacecraft or like vehicle is described and comprises a fluid...