Ball Aerospace Green Propellant Mission to
Test New Thermal Insulation
Oct. 29, 2013
NASA's Green
Propellant Infusion Mission (GPIM) has been
selected to test an advanced form of thermal
insulation, called integrated multi-layer
insulation (IMLI) that could become standard
on future satellites and cryogenic
subsystems. Validating this new
insulation in space will help NASA build the
technology required for long human
spaceflight missions. Under a
subcontract from Ball Aerospace &
Technologies Corp., Quest Thermal Group LLC
will manufacture the new insulation that
will fly aboard the 2015 GPIM mission.
High performance
insulation materials are required on
spacecraft and cryogenic space systems to
maintain consistent spacecraft and subsystem
temperatures in the space environment to
keep them operating longer and more
efficiently.
"Flying IMLI
aboard GPIM is a win–win for the program"
said
Jim Oschmann,
vice president and general manager for
Ball's Civil Space and Technology business
unit. "Conventional insulation was
necessary for the GPIM spacecraft, and now
we can fly a section of the IMLI at no extra
cost to the program and prove it for
operational use.
The new IMLI
offers many benefits to conventional
insulation. By utilizing rigid spacers
instead of netting to separate radiation
layers, it is structurally more robust,
lighter and easier to install. It also
has a nearly 30 percent thermal performance
increase over conventional multi-layer
insulation; the IMLI's increased thermal
capability is critical for minimizing heat
transference and boil-off of cryogenic
storage systems.
The IMLI
manufacturer, Quest, a small company located
in
Arvada, CO, is developing the
technology under small business innovative
research (SBIR) contracts to NASA.
"Utilizing a small
business to innovate a new product and
adding it to the GPIM mission demonstrates
the synergy between all of the Space
Technology project offices to develop and
infuse technology into the market," added
Oschmann. "Our collaboration on GPIM
further enables NASA to demonstrate another
critical technology needed to make future
space missions safer, more efficient and
more cost effective."
GPIM is a project
for NASA's Technology Mission Demonstration
(TDM) program managed by NASA's Space
Technology Mission Directorate (STMD).
The primary purpose of the mission is to
demonstrate the viability of an alternative
propulsion system for spacecraft other than
hydrazine by flying a "green" propulsion
system on a Ball-built small satellite. Ball
Aerospace, the prime contractor and
principal investigator, leads a team of
co-investigators including Aerojet
Rocketdyne, Edwards Air Force Research
Laboratory (AFRL), NASA Glenn Research
Center (GRC) and NASA Kennedy Space Center
(KSC).