Title :
Glass surface spall size resulting from interplanetary dust impacts
Author :
Iyer, Kaushik A. ; Mehoke, Douglas S. ; Chadegani, Alireza ; Batra, Romesh C.
Author_Institution :
Appl. Phys. Lab., Johns Hopkins Univ., Laurel, MD, USA
Abstract :
The size of relatively large dynamic conchoidal fractures, i.e., surface spalls, immediately adjacent to and around interplanetary dust (IDP) hypervelocity impact (HVI) craters or pits in glass substrates is relevant to spacecraft solar cell and science instrument lens performance metrics, as well as glass pane design and safety in manned missions. This paper presents an analysis of the diameter of surface spalls in glass for the Solar Probe Plus (SPP) spacecraft, whose solar arrays and instruments must survive a 7-year mission involving significant dust interaction. Previously published data and regressions for surface spalling obtained from ground-HVI-tested and space-returned glass samples and solar cells are collated for this purpose. Analysis of the collective dataset reveals an unexpected and design-relevant finding: spall diameter, DS, obtained with dust-scale particles (diameter, dP <; 55 μm) and solar cells scales differently with impact velocity as compared with diameters obtained with “macroparticles” (dP = 400-3,500 μm) and glass monoliths. The average DS/dP obtained with dust-scale particles and glass in a layered substrate is approximately 1/5th of that obtained with macroparticles and a glass monolith. It is also found that a Ballistic Limit Equation (BLE) developed for glass HVI cratering at relatively low velocities (<; 10 km/s) can be modified for spalling and used successfully for bounding design calculations at the higher velocities considered.
Keywords :
aerospace components; design engineering; dust; glass; glass products; impact (mechanical); solar cells; space vehicles; 7-year mission; BLE; HVI; HVI cratering; IDP; SPP; ballistic limit equation; bounding design calculations; design-relevant finding; dust interaction; dynamic conchoidal fractures; glass pane design; glass surface spall size; ground-HVI-tested glass samples; interplanetary dust hypervelocity impact craters; interplanetary dust impacts; manned missions; science instrument lens performance metrics; solar arrays; solar instruments; solar probe plus spacecraft; space-returned glass samples; spacecraft solar cell; surface spalling; Glass; Interplanetary; Photovoltaic cells; Silicon compounds; Substrates; Surface cracks; Windows;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2015 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-5379-0
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2015.7119067