Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7045172 Applied Thermal Engineering 2018 31 Pages PDF
Abstract
CubeSats have revolutionized the space industry in the past two decades. Its successor, the PocketQube class seems to be a lower size limit for a satellite which can operate continuously and can be received by radio amateur equipment. The present paper discusses the simulation of the thermal environment of the SMOG-1 PocketQube satellite at low Earth orbit by both thermal network and finite element models. The major findings of the analyses are the following. Even a single node per printed circuit board model can provide adequate information about the thermal behavior without tuning the physical parameters. By applying a finite element model with few magnitudes more nodes, the predicted inner temperature increased as the losses were reduced in the radiation-dominant environment compared to the thermal network model. Therefore, this latter method provides a more conservative temperature estimation. The most sensitive component of small-sized satellites is the battery which remains in the desired positive temperature regime even in this satellite class according to the finite element model. However, the thermal network model predicted a restricted battery charging protocol to ∼50% of the lit duration. Nevertheless, this condition still results in a positive energy balance by a factor of 1.5.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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