Braze Development of Graphite Fiber for Use in Phase Change Material Heat Sinks
Author(s) -
Gregory Quinn,
Durwood Beringer,
Brian Gleason,
Ryan Stephan
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
41st international conference on environmental systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2011-5230
Subject(s) - graphite , brazing , materials science , heat sink , phase change material , fiber , phase change , metallurgy , composite material , engineering physics , mechanical engineering , engineering , alloy
Hamilton Sundstrand (HS), together with NASA Johnson Space Center, developed methods to metallurgically join graphite fiber to aluminum. The goal of the effort was to demonstrate improved thermal conductance, tensile strength and manufacturability compared to existing epoxy bonded techniques. These improvements have the potential to increase the performance and robustness of phase change material heat sinks that use graphite fibers as an interstitial material. Initial work focused on evaluating joining techniques from four suppliers, each consisting of a metallization step followed by brazing or soldering of one inch square blocks of Fibercore graphite fiber material to aluminum end sheets. Results matched the strength and thermal conductance of the epoxy bonded control samples, so two suppliers were down-selected for a second round of braze development. The second round of braze samples had up to a 300% increase in strength and up to a 132% increase in thermal conductance over the bonded samples. However, scalability and repeatability proved to be significant hurdles with the metallization approach. An alternative approach was pursued which used a nickel braze allow to prepare the carbon fibers for joining with aluminum. Initial results on sample blocks indicate that this approach should be repeatable and scalable with good strength and thermal conductance when compared with epoxy bonding.
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