9–13 Jul 2017
Monona Terrace Community and Convention Center
US/Central timezone

Development of stable, low resistance solder joints for space-flight HTS lead assemblies

12 Jul 2017, 09:45
15m
Hall of Ideas - EH

Hall of Ideas - EH

Speaker

Dr Edgar Canavan (NASA–Goddard Space Flight Center)

Description

The solder joints in spaceflight high temperature superconductor (HTS) lead assemblies for certain astrophysics missions have strict constraints on size and power dissipation. In addition, the joints must tolerate years of storage at room temperature, many thermal cycles, and several vibration tests between their manufacture and their final operation on orbit. As reported previously, solder joints between REBCO coated conductors and normal metal traces for the Astro-H mission showed low temperature joint resistance that grew approximately as log time over the course of months. Although the assemblies worked without issue in orbit, for the upcoming X-ray Astrophysics Recovery Mission we are attempting to improve our solder process to give lower, more stable, and more consistent joint resistance. We produce numerous sample joints and measure time- and thermal cycle-dependent resistance, and characterize the joints using x-ray and other analysis tools. For a subset of the joints, we use SEM/EDS to try to understand the physical and chemical processes that effect joint behavior.

Author

Dr Edgar Canavan (NASA–Goddard Space Flight Center)

Co-authors

Meng Chiao (NASA – GSFC) Dr Lyudmyla Panashchenko (NASA–Goddard Space Flight Center)

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