This is really promising. We may even be able to carry surface heat away using pumped fluids. suddenly we have way forward to mach ten craft that can really enter the atmosphere and asurvive a rapid deceleration.
It also informs that our fabrication skills are also rising as well It appears possible.
All this does set the stage for the Bigs able to loft a craft into low Earth orbit and then drop it back anywhere on Earth. Point to point travel will become quick and even cheap.
Carbon nanotubes key to next-gen heat shields for hypersonic aircraft
By David Szondy
November 16, 2019
Professor Zhiyong (Richard) Liang Ph.D. , left, a professor and director of the High-Performance Materials Institute (HPMI) and Industrial and Manufacturing engineering research faculty member in Ayou Hoa, Ph.D. look over carbon fiber polymer coated with a protective heat shield made of a carbon nanotube sheet that was heated to a temperature of 1,900 degrees centigrade
Mark Wallheiser
A team of
scientists at Florida State University's High-Performance Materials
Institute is using advanced nanomaterials to produce lightweight heat
shields that can stand up to the impact of hypersonic speeds.
Based on sheets of carbon nanotubes called "buckypaper," the new
experimental shields can be made into a very thin, flexible skin that
can be applied to airframes to both protect and support them.
For
aircraft and spacecraft operating in the atmosphere at speeds above
five times the speed of sound, heat shields are a necessity if the
vehicle is to avoid severe damage at the very least. This is especially
true today when many aerospace designs rely increasingly on carbon
composites that provide strength and lightness, but are vulnerable to
high temperatures.
Heat shields made of phenol plastics have been
around since the 1950s. Known as ablative heat shields, these protect a
returning spacecraft by burning away in layers, carrying away the excess
heat. Unfortunately, these shields are bulky, inflexible, and have to
be replaced after a single use. In the 1970s, the US Space Shuttle used a
ceramic heat shield that absorbed and re-radiated heat to protect the
craft. These tiles could be reused, but they were still bulky, rigid,
and brittle as well.
As an alternative, the Florida State team is
looking at buckypaper, which is made by taking carbon nanotubes
(tube-shaped carbon molecules 50,000 times thinner than a human hair)
and pressing them into sheets. When compressed into layers the paper is
10 times lighter but up to 500 times stronger than steel.
To
make a heat shield, the buckypaper is soaked phenol resin to form a
light, flexible material. It's very thin, yet so strong that it can help
to support the aircraft's structure. When subjected to flame tests, the
buckypaper samples kept their strength and flexibility while dispersing
heat away from the base layer underneath the shield at temperatures of
up to 1,900° C (3,450° F).
The research was published in Carbon.
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