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Thermal and Chemical Characterization of Composite Materials (MSFC Center Director's Discretionary Fund Final Report, Project No. ED36-18)

NASA/TM-2003-212934, Stanley, D.C. and Huff, T.L., Thermal and Chemical Characterization of Composite Materials (MSFC Center Director's Discretionary Fund Final Report, Project No. ED36-18), George C. Marshall Space Flight Center , Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, DC 20546-0001, December 2003, pp. 16, Format(s): PDF 484k

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The purpose of this research effort was to (1) provide a concise and well-defined property profile of current and developing composite materials using thermal and chemical characterization techniques and (2) optimize analytical testing requirements of materials. This effort applied a diverse array of methodologies to ascertain composite material properties. Often, a single method or technique will provide useful, but nonetheless incomplete, information on material composition and/or behavior. To more completely understand and predict material properties, a broad-based analytical approach is required. By developing a database of information comprised of both thermal and chemical properties, material behavior under varying conditions may be better understood. This is even more important in the aerospace community, where new composite materials and those in the development stage have little reference data. For example, Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy spectral databases available for identification of vapor phase spectra, such as those generated during experiments, generally refer to well-defined chemical compounds. Because this method renders a unique thermal decomposition spectral pattern, even larger, more diverse databases, such as those found in solid and liquid phase FTIR spectroscopy libraries, cannot be used. By combining this and other available methodologies, a database specifically for new materials and materials being developed at Marshall Space Flight Center can be generated. In addition, characterizing materials using this approach will be extremely useful in the verification of materials and identification of anomalies in NASA-wide investigations.
Keywords:thermal, chemical, characterization, composite, materials, fourier, transform, infrared, spectroscopy
Subjects:Chemistry and Materials: Chemistry and Materials (General)
ID Code:658
Deposited On:03 June 2004