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

Thermal conductivity of aerogel blanket insulation under cryogenic-vacuum conditions in different gas environments

12 Jul 2017, 14:45
15m
Madison Ballroom BC

Madison Ballroom BC

Speaker

James Fesmire (NASA)

Description

Thermal conductivity of low-density materials in thermal insulation systems varies dramatically with the environment: cold vacuum pressure, residual gas composition, and boundary temperatures. Using a reference material of aerogel composite blanket (reinforcement fibers surrounded by silica aerogel), an experimental basis for the physical heat transmission model of aerogel composites and other low-density, porous materials is suggested. Cryogenic-vacuum testing between the boundary temperatures of 78 K and 293 K is performed using a one meter cylindrical, absolute heat flow calorimeter with a aerogel blanket specimen exposed to different gas environments of nitrogen, helium, argon, or CO2. Cold vacuum pressures include the full range from 1x10-5 torr to 760 torr. The soft vacuum region, from about 0.1 torr to 10 torr, is complex and difficult to model because all modes of heat transfer – solid conduction, radiation, gas conduction, and convection – are significant contributors to the total heat flow. Therefore, the soft vacuum tests are emphasized for both heat transfer analysis and practical thermal data. Results for the aerogel composite blanket are analyzed and compared to data for its component materials. With the new thermal conductivity data, future applications of aerogel-based insulation systems are also surveyed. These include Mars exploration and surface systems in the 5 torr CO2 environment, field joints for vacuum-jacketed cryogenic piping systems, common bulkhead panels for cryogenic tanks on space launch vehicles, and liquid hydrogen cryofuel systems with helium purged conduits or enclosures.

Authors

James Fesmire (NASA) Adam Swanger (NASA Kennedy Space Center) Mr Jacob Ancipink (NASA Kennedy Space Center) Dr Shannon White (Aspen Aerogels, Inc.) Dr David Yarbrough (R&D Services)

Presentation materials