کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
1507807 | 1511060 | 2012 | 4 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

Temperature control of optical focal planes comes with the intrinsic challenge of creating a pathway that is both extremely flexible mechanically and highly conductive thermally. The task is further complicated because science-caliber optical focal planes are extremely delicate, yet time, cost, and their unique nature means that their mechanical resiliency is rarely tested and documented. The mechanical engineer tasked with the thermo-mechanical design must then create a highly conductive thermal link that minimizes the tensile and shear stresses transmitted to the focal plane without design parameters on an acceptable stiffness and without data on the stiffness of previously implemented thermal links.This paper describes the development and testing of the thermal link developed for the Portable Remote Imaging Spectrometer (PRISM) instrument. It will provide experimentally determined mechanical stiffness plots in the three axes of interest. Analytical and experimental thermal conductance results for the two-arm focal-plane thermal strap (TAFTS), from cryogenic to room temperatures, are also presented. The paper also briefly describes some elements of the fabrication process followed in developing a novel design solution, which provides high conductance and symmetrical mechanical loading, while providing enhanced flexibility in all three dimensions.
► Describes utility of a two-arm flexible thermal strap (TAFTS) for thermal control.
► Describes development and testing of an innovative thermal strap.
► Plots analytical & measured thermal conductance at room and cryogenic temperatures.
► Plots mechanical stiffness at room temperature in three axes with error bars.
► Demonstrates flexibility in all axes and utility in cooling delicate optics.
Journal: Cryogenics - Volume 52, Issues 4–6, April–June 2012, Pages 306–309