Publication Date:
2019-06-27
Description:
For future space applications, it is important that thermal protection systems be reusable for space shuttle flights. Beryllium offers a unique combination of properties for use as a heat shield material (stiffness, lightweight, ability to absorb heat). In order to adequately test these properties, it was necessary to fabricate heat shields. The concept used was a two-section test panel 99.1 x 99.1 cm (39 x 39 inch) with each section made of two 0.051 cm (0.020 inch) thick beryllium corrugations brazed together as a mirror image, with titanium (Ti-6Al-4V) used as standoffs to support the panel structure. The work prior to fabrication included brazability of both beryllium and titanium, forming of beryllium and titanium, machining processes involving beryllium and chem-milling beryllium. Sub-scale samples were made of all details before actual fabrication of the large panel. The full scale test panel was hot-formed at 950 K, chem-milled to 0.041 + or - 0.005 cm (0.016 + or - 0.002 inches), trimmed, vacuum brazed, drilled and assembled.
Keywords:
THERMODYNAMICS AND COMBUSTION
Type:
NASA-CR-123756
,
MCR-72-158
,
AMT-LAB-72-6-1
Format:
application/pdf