Marshall Technical Reports Server

Heater Development, Fabrication, and Testing: Analysis of Fabricated Heaters

NASA/TM-2008-215466, Bragg-Sitton, S.M. and Dickens, R.E. and Farmer, J.T. and Davis, J.D. and Adams, M.R. and Martin, J.J. and Webster, K.L., Heater Development, Fabrication, and Testing: Analysis of Fabricated Heaters, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington, DC 20546–0001, July 2008, pp. 224, Format(s): PDF 69465k

View PDF
- Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader or other PDF viewer.

Thermal simulators (highly designed heater elements) developed at the Early Flight Fission Test Facility (EFF-TF) are used to simulate the heat from nuclear fission in a variety of reactor concepts. When inserted into the reactor geometry, the purpose of the thermal simulators is to deliver thermal power to the test article in the same fashion as if nuclear fuel were present. Considerable effort has been expended to mimic heat from fission as closely as possible. To accurately represent the fuel, the simulators should be capable of matching the overall properties of the nuclear fuel rather than simply matching the fuel temperatures. This includes matching thermal stresses in the pin, pin conductivities, total core power, and core power profile (axial and radial). This Technical Memorandum discusses the historical development of the thermal simulators used in nonnuclear testing at the EFF-TF and provides a basis for the development of the current series of thermal simulators. The status of current heater fabrication and testing is assessed, providing data and analyses for both successes and failures experienced in the heater development and testing program.
Keywords:fission power systems, nonnuclear testing, thermal simulators, space power, early flight fission test facility, heater elements for nuclear simulation
Subjects:Astronautics: Spacecraft Design, Testing And Performance
ID Code:785
Deposited On:07 August 2008