当将HIAD堆叠环面壳体扩展到15m级系统时,制造挑战和优势

Greg Swanson, N. Cheatwood, Keith Johnson, A. Calomino
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引用次数: 4

摘要

美国宇航局的高超声速充气气动减速器(HIAD)可展开壳体技术的发展已经进行了十多年的工作。这项工作包括多次地面测试和飞行测试,最终完成了HIAD项目的第二代(Gen-2)空壳系统。HIAD项目团队已经开发、制造并测试了具有柔性热保护系统(F-TPS)的叠层环面充气结构(IS),其直径为3-6米,锥角为60和70度。为了满足NASA和商业近期目标,HIAD团队必须将当前技术的直径扩大到12-15米。因此,HIAD项目在扩展该技术方面的经验已经到了关键时刻。从6米级增长到15米级的系统将给已经复杂的制造过程带来许多新的结构和物流挑战。虽然HIAD设计的总体架构和关键方面适用于大型车辆,但该技术的细节需要重新评估,并可能重新设计,以用于15m级的HIAD系统。其中包括:在整个IS中传递载荷的结构带的布局和尺寸,充气气体屏障设计,环面直径和编织结构,内部压力和膨胀线路由,用于涂层和粘合的粘合剂,以及F-TPS gore设计和接缝制造。随着规模的扩大,制造和测试IS和F-TPS的物流也变得更具挑战性。与6米的空壳(迄今为止建造的最大的HIAD)相比,12米的空壳具有4倍的横截面积,而15米的空壳具有超过6倍的面积。这意味着制造和测试程序需要重新检查,以考虑到外壳部件的绝对尺寸和重量。这将影响制造过程中的各种步骤,例如:在组装过程中堆叠环面、缝合结构带、初始膨胀环面和缝合F-TPS孔。此外,将需要新的方法和硬件来处理和地面测试单独的tori和完全组装的hiad。将HIAD的空壳扩展到15米级系统也有值得注意的好处。处理手工纺织结构的两个复杂问题是材料成分的非线性和制造过程中人为精度的作用。更大、更有能力的HIAD结构应该承受更大的工作载荷,这可能会使材料部件的结构响应脱离非线性状态,进入首选的线性响应范围。此外,合理假设制造精度的大小随着结构的增长而保持不变,制造误差的相对影响应该随着纺织部件尺寸的百分比而减小。这两种效应结合在一起,提高了12-15m HIAD结构响应的预测能力和均匀性。在本文中,将讨论将HIAD堆叠环面壳体扩展到15m级系统所面临的挑战和相关的缓解计划。此外,还将进一步探讨扩大结构的好处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Manufacturing challenges and benefits when scaling the HIAD stacked-torus aeroshell to a 15m-class system
Over a decade of work has been conducted in the development of NASA's Hypersonic Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerator (HIAD) deployable aeroshell technology. This effort has included multiple ground test campaigns and flight tests culminating in the HIAD project's second generation (Gen-2) aeroshell system. The HIAD project team has developed, fabricated, and tested stacked-torus inflatable structures (IS) with flexible thermal protection systems (F-TPS) ranging in diameters from 3-6m, with cone angles of 60 and 70 deg. To meet NASA and commercial near term objectives, the HIAD team must scale the current technology up to 12-15m in diameter. Therefore, the HIAD project's experience in scaling the technology has reached a critical juncture. Growing from a 6m to a 15m-class system will introduce many new structural and logistical challenges to an already complicated manufacturing process. Although the general architecture and key aspects of the HIAD design scale well to larger vehicles, details of the technology will need to be reevaluated and possibly redesigned for use in a 15m-class HIAD system. These include: layout and size of the structural webbing that transfers load throughout the IS, inflatable gas barrier design, torus diameter and braid construction, internal pressure and inflation line routing, adhesives used for coating and bonding, and F-TPS gore design and seam fabrication. The logistics of fabricating and testing the IS and the F-TPS also become more challenging with increased scale. Compared to the 6m aeroshell (the largest HIAD built to date), a 12m aeroshell has four times the cross-sectional area, and a 15m one has over six times the area. This means that fabrication and test procedures will need to be reexamined to account for the sheer size and weight of the aeroshell components. This will affect a variety of steps in the manufacturing process, such as: stacking the tori during assembly, stitching the structural webbing, initial inflation of tori, and stitching of F-TPS gores. Additionally, new approaches and hardware will be required for handling and ground testing of both individual tori and the fully assembled HIADs. There are also noteworthy benefits of scaling up the HIAD aeroshell to a 15m-class system. Two complications in working with handmade textile structures are the non-linearity of the material components and the role of human accuracy during fabrication. Larger, more capable, HIAD structures should see much larger operational loads, potentially bringing the structural response of the material components out of the nonlinear regime and into the preferred linear response range. Also, making the reasonable assumption that the magnitude of fabrication accuracy remains constant as the structures grow, the relative effect of fabrication errors should decrease as a percentage of the textile component size. Combined, these two effects improve the predictive capability and the uniformity of the structural response for a 12-15m HIAD. In this paper, the challenges and associated mitigation plans related to scaling up the HIAD stacked-torus aeroshell to a 15m-class system will be discussed. In addition, the benefits of enlarging the structure will be further explored.
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