Full-size solar dynamic heat receiver thermal-vacuum tests
Abstract
The testing of a full-size, 102 kW, solar dynamic heat receiver utilizing high-temperature thermal energy storage is described. The purpose of the test program was to quantify receiver thermodynamic performance, operating temperatures, and thermal response to changes in environmental and power module interface boundary conditions. The heat receiver was tested in a vacuum chamber with liquid nitrogen cold shrouds and an aperture cold plate to partly simulate a low-Earth-orbit environment. The cavity of the receiver was heated by an infrared quartz lamp heater with 30 independently controllable zones to allow axially and circumferentially varied flux distributions. A closed-Brayton cycle engine simulator conditioned a helium-xenon gas mixture to specific interface conditions to simulate the various operational modes of the solar dynamic power module on the Space Station Freedom. Inlet gas temperature, pressure, and flow rate were independently varied. A total of 58 simulated orbital cycles, each 94 minutes in duration, was completed during the test period.
- Publication:
-
IECEC 1991; Proceedings of the 26th Intersociety Energy Conversion Engineering Conference, Volume 1
- Pub Date:
- 1991
- Bibcode:
- 1991iece....1..262S
- Keywords:
-
- Boundary Conditions;
- Brayton Cycle;
- Earth Orbital Environments;
- Heat Storage;
- Phase Change Materials;
- Solar Collectors;
- Solar Dynamic Power Systems;
- Space Environment Simulation;
- Space Stations;
- Thermal Vacuum Tests;
- Vacuum Chambers;
- Calcium Fluorides;
- Flow Velocity;
- Gas Mixtures;
- Gas Temperature;
- Helium;
- Inlet Temperature;
- Liquid Nitrogen;
- Lithium Fluorides;
- Quartz Lamps;
- Xenon;
- Spacecraft Propulsion and Power