AVCOAT

Apollo and Orion Avcoat

AVCOAT 5026-39 is a NASA code for a specific ablative heat shield material created by Avco[1][2] (acquired by Textron in 1984).[3] It is an epoxy novolac resin with special additives in a fiberglass honeycomb matrix. In fabrication, the empty honeycomb is bonded to the primary structure and the resin is gunned into each cell individually.[4]

History

AVCOAT was used for the heat shield on NASA's Apollo Command Module.[5] In its final form, this material was called AVCOAT 5026-39.

Although AVCOAT was not used for the Space Shuttle orbiters, NASA is using the material for its next generation Orion spacecraft.[6] The Avcoat to be used on Orion is reformulated to meet environmental legislation that has been passed since the end of Apollo.[7][8]

Specifications

Flight use

Unmanned

Manned

References

  1. NASA's Exploration Systems Architecture Study - Chap.5 (Nov. 2005)
  2. Fire-Resistant Reinforcement Makes Steel Structures Sturdier (2006)
  3. Textron Systems History Archived November 30, 2010, at the Wayback Machine., 1984 History, "Textron acquires Avco, including Lycoming, to become Avco Systems Textron", 2010, accessed 2010-11-27.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Flight-Test Analysis Of Apollo Heat-Shield Material Using The Pacemaker Vehicle System NASA Technical Note D-4713, pp. 8, 1968-08, accessed 2010-12-26. "Avcoat 5026-39/HC-G is an epoxy novolac resin with special additives in a fiberglass honeycomb matrix. In fabrication, the empty honeycomb is bonded to the primary structure and the resin is gunned into each cell individually. ... The overall density of the material is 32 lb/ft3 (512 kg/m3). The char of the material is composed mainly of silica and carbon. It is necessary to know the amounts of each in the char because in the ablation analysis the silica is considered to be inert, but the carbon is considered to enter into exothermic reactions with oxygen. ... At 2160O R (12000 K), 54 percent by weight of the virgin material has volatilized and 46 percent has remained as char. ... In the virgin material, 25 percent by weight is silica, and since the silica is considered to be inert the char-layer composition becomes 6.7 lb/ft3 (107.4 kg/m3) of carbon and 8 lb/ft3 (128.1 kg/m3) of silica."
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Apollo Experience Report - Thermal Protection Subsystem (Jan. 1974)
  6. 1 2 NASA.gov - NASA Selects Material for Orion Spacecraft Heat Shield (April 7, 2009)
  7. Flightglobal.com - NASA's Orion heat shield decision expected this month (Oct 3, 2009)
  8. Company Watch (Apr 12, 2009 )

External links

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