Title: Contamination Analysis of Optical Telescope Assembly OTA
1Contamination Analysis ofOptical Telescope
Assembly (OTA)
- April 18 2006
- Electronic, Mechanical Components and Materials
Engineering Group, - Institute of Aerospace Technology (IAT), JAXA
2Impact of Contamination
Molecules released into a vacuum environment from
material surfaces and organic materials can
adhere to other spacecraft surfaces
- Degradation of optical sensor by attenuation
and/or scattering of light -gt Degrades S/N
ratio - Change of thermo-optical properties -gt
Increases Solar absorption - Surrounding pressure increase -gtElectric
Discharge - Contamination on the critical surfaces must be
predicted and controlled. - Operational lifetime should be estimated
according to the predicted contaminant deposition.
3OTA Contamination Control Requirement
- Significant heat flux enter the Sun pointing OTA.
- Excessive absorbed solar energy introduces
deformation of the mirror. Therefore, Solar
Absorptance of critical surfaces must be
controlled under a certain level. - Contamination control during ground process
- Material Selection
- Cleanliness control
- Vacuum bakeout
- End of life contamination budget200300Å
- Contaminant deposition to be predicted
analytically. - Target outgassing rates of OTA components were
distributed according to the contamination
budget. - Additional vacuum bakeout of components were
performed from the analysis results.
4External contamination analysis
- Predict Molecular contamination under thermal
vacuum condition
- Mathematical models for
- Outgassing
- Transport
- Absorption
- Key parameters
- Contaminant source temperature
- View factor
- Contamination sensitive surface temperature
5Analysis Conditions-Components of Uncertainty-
Integrated outgassed Mass
Contaminant Source temperature
Outgassing curve fit and Extrapolation35
Outgass from minor volume materials
Analysis Result Combined Uncertainty Over 100
Test sample preparation 70
Mass measurements
Outgassing rate Measured data 80
Contaminated surface temperature
Geometry model
View factor calculation 50
Contaminant Density20
Times of reflection
Reflectance
Test sample preparation 70
Re-sublimation temperature measurement
Multiple reflection
Scattering with ambient gas
Photodeposition rate80
Self scattering
!! Uncertainty of each component is preliminary !!
Contaminant absorption
Contaminant transportation
6Case study in OTA Analysis
- Two analytical Tools
- Swales Modified TRASYS
- JAXA Thermal Desktop
- Operational time periods
- 3 Year /5 Year
- 3 on-orbit modes
- Decontamination Mode 1
- Decontamination Mode 2
- Operational Mode
7OTA Geometry Model
Top Door
- Total267 nodes
- Contamination Critical Surfaces 11 nodes
- Contamination Sources 85 nodes
Heat Dump Window
Secondary Mirror
CLU Lens Unit
Primary Mirror
8Analysis Conditions
- Contamination source temperature
Highest temperature predicted - Contamination sensitive surface temperature
Lowest temperature predicted - Solar Arrays and OTA components satisfy their
target outgassing rates before launch.
9Analysis Results
10Predicted 3 Year Deposition
11Predicted 5 Year Deposition
12Limit of analytical prediction
- The molecules contamination process is affected
by many more factors. - Crosslinking and Coloration induced by
ultraviolet (UV) radiation - SiO2 production by atomic oxygen (AO) and
siloxane - Erosion by AO
- Only a part of parameters are now considered in
analysis. - The parameters have synergy effect each other.
- Samples contaminated on-orbit are barely observed.
Hard to establish correlation with true
value Because.... True Value is NEVER available
13Conclusion
- OTA is appropriately designed to perform required
contamination control. - Case studies with two analytical tools produced
the results of wide variety. - In some analytical cases, the predicted
deposition exceeded the end of life contamination
budget. - Analysis results have significant uncertainty.
- The operational life estimation should be
verified using data obtained on-orbit operation
to reduce uncertainty.