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Thermal Vacuum Test of Ice as a Phase Change Material Integrated with a Radiator
Author(s) -
Stephen Lee,
Thomas O. Leimkuehler,
Ryan Stephan,
Hung Vu Tuan Le
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
40th international conference on environmental systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2010-6113
Subject(s) - radiator (engine cooling) , heat sink , phase change material , heat pipe , nuclear engineering , environmental science , thermal , materials science , electromagnetic shielding , thermal energy storage , thermal mass , mechanical engineering , heat transfer , meteorology , engineering , mechanics , composite material , physics , thermodynamics
§Water may be used as radiation shielding for Solar Particle Events (SPE) to protect crewmembers in the Lunar Electric Rover (LER). Because the water is already present for radiation protection, it could also provide a mass efficient solution to the vehicle’s thermal control system. This water can be frozen by heat rejection from a radiator and used as a Phase Change Material (PCM) for thermal storage. Use of this water as a PCM can eliminate the need for a pumped fluid loop thermal control system as well as reduce the required size of the radiator. This paper describes the testing and analysis performed for the Rover Engineering Development Unit (REDU), a scaled-down version of a water PCM heat sink for the LER. The REDU was tested in a thermal-vacuum chamber at environmental temperatures similar to those of a horizontal radiator panel on the lunar surface. Testing included complete freeze and melt cycles along with scaled transient heat load profiles simulating a 24-hour day for the rover.

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