SAME
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SAME-R Overview Chart |
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May 2010 - The Smoke Aerosol Measurement Experiment-Reflight (SAME-R)
hardware was launched to ISS aboard Atlantis on May 14, 2010.
April 2010 - The Smoke Aerosol Measurement Experiment-Reflight
(SAME-R) team held its Executive Systems Acceptance Review on April 23,
2010. The SAR-2 Board approved the SAME-R hardware for shipment. The
hardware shipped on April 25, 2010 and was turned over on April 26, 2010
to Kennedy Space Center (KSC) personnel.
• The Smoke Aerosol Measurement Experiment-Reflight (SAME-R)
team held its Engineering Systems Acceptance Review on April 16, 2010.
• The Smoke Aerosol Measurement Experiment-Reflight (SAME-R)
team has submitted the Phase III Safety Data Package to Glenn Research
Center (GRC) for final review and approval, prior to holding an out-of-board
Safety Review with the Johnson Space Center (JSC) Payload Safety Review
Panel.
Background/Overview
Smoke is a general term that encompasses aerosol materials produced by a number of processes. In particular it can include unburned, recondensed, original polymer or pyrolysis products that can be liquid, solid, carbonaceous soot, condensed water vapor, or ash particles. Soot particles dominate the smoke particulate in established flaming fires while unburned pyrolysis products and recondensed polymer fragments are produced by smoldering and pyrolysis in the early stage of fire growth. Given the constrained space on any spacecraft, the target for the fire detection system is necessarily the early phase and not established flaming fires; consequently, the primary target for detection is the pyrolysis products and not the soot.
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Prior spacecraft systems are summarized in more detail
in papers by Friedman and Urban. In the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions,
the crew quarters were limited and mission durations were short. Consequently
it was considered reasonable that the astronauts would rapidly detect
any fire. The Skylab module, however, included approximately 30 UV-sensing
fire detectors.1 These devices were limited to line-of-sight and were
reported to have difficulties with false alarms. The Space Shuttle
(Space Transportation System (STS)) detectors were based upon ionization
fire detector technology, the most advanced technology available at the
time and used an inertial separator designed to eliminate particles larger
than 1-2 micrometers. The International Space Station (ISS) smoke detectors
use near-IR forward scattering, rendering them most sensitive to particles
larger than a micrometer, outside of the range of sensitivity of the
shuttle detector.
More details of the ISS and STS detector requirements are presented by
Steisslinger et al. 3 however the basic details are summarized
below. The STS detector, as built, was designed to alarm at 2 mg/m3
(based on 1 micrometer particles) or 0.022 mg/m3/s rise in concentration
for 20 seconds. The ISS detector was designed to alarm at obscuration
of 1% per foot using an Underwriters Laboratory (UL) smoke box and a
white light extinction meter. This was implemented using a transfer
standard detector and a 0.5 micrometer polystyrene latex-bead aerosol
system that was used to set the amplifiers on each unit. The transfer
standard was calibrated in the smoke box and then used to set the levels
with the aerosol system.
As described by Friedman there have been six overheat and failed component
failures in the NASA Orbiter fleet in addition to several similar incidents
that have occurred on the ISS. None of these events spread into a real fire
but as mission durations increase, the likelihood of failures increases. The
experience on Mir in 1997 has shown that failure of oxygen generation systems
can have significant consequences. As a result, improved understanding of spacecraft
fire detection is critically needed.
Previous work on smoke particles from low-gravity sources by Urban et
al. found that the particulate produced by low-gravity flames (soot
or unburned fuel particles) tends to have larger size particles than
in normal gravity. Results from the CSD (Comparative Soot Diagnostics)
Experiment which studied smoke properties in low-gravity from several
spacecraft materials suggested that liquid smoke particles could achieve
sizes larger than 1 µm while solid particulate remained in the
sub-micrometer range. However, the CSD experiment did not produce
sufficient data concerning the size of the liquid smoke particles to
guide detector design. The combined impact of these limited results and
theoretical predictions is that, as opposed to extrapolation from 1-g
data, direct knowledge of low-g combustion particulate is needed for
more confident design of smoke detectors for spacecraft.
Project Management:
Contacts at NASA Glenn Research
Center
Project Manager: William Sheredy
William.A.Sheredy@nasa.gov
216-433-3685
Project Scientist: Dr. Gary Ruff
Gary.A.Ruff@nasa.gov
216-433-5697
Principal Investigator: Dr. David Urban. NASA GRC
David.L.Urban@nasa.gov
216-433-2835
Co-Investigator: Dr. George Mulholland,
U. of Maryland
Co-Investigator: Dr. Zeng-Guang Yuan,
NCMR
Co-Investigator: Dr. Jiann Yang, NIST
Co-Investigator: Dr. Thomas Cleary,
NIST
Engineering Team: ZIN Tech., Inc.
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