Skip to main content
Log in

Degradation of Spacecraft Materials in the Space Environment

  • Technical Feature
  • Published:
MRS Bulletin Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

When we think of space, we typically think of a vacuum containing very little matter that lies between the Earth and other planetary and stellar bodies. However, the space above Earth’s breathable atmosphere and beyond contains many things that make designing durable spacecraft a challenge. Depending on where the spacecraft is flying, it may encounter atomic oxygen, ultraviolet and other forms of radiation, charged particles, micrometeoroids and debris, and temperature extremes. These environments on their own and in combination can cause degradation and failure of polymers, composites, paints and other materials used on the exterior of spacecraft for thermal control, structure, and power generation. This article briefly discusses and gives examples of some of the degradation experienced on spacecraft and flight experiments as a result of the space environment and the use of ground and space data to predict durability.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  1. L.J. Leger, Oxygen Atom Reaction with Shuttle Materials at Orbital Altitudes, NASA TM-58246 (1982).

  2. A.F. Whitaker, paper presented at the AIAA Shuttle Environment and Operations Meeting, Washington, DC, 31 October–2 November 1983, AIAA-83-2632-CP.

  3. R.L. O’Neal, A.S. Levine, C.C. Kiser, Photographic Survey of the LDEF Mission, NASA SP 531 (1996).

  4. B.A. Banks, M.J. Mirtich, S.K. Rutledge, D.M. Swec, H.K. Nahra, 23rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, 14–17 January 1985, NASA TM-87051.

  5. B.A. Banks, B.M. Auer, S.K. Rutledge, C.M. Hill, Proceedings of the 4th Annual Workshop on Space Operations Automation and Robotics (SOAR 90), Albuquerque, NM, 26–28 June 1990.

  6. S.K. Rutledge, R.M. Olle, Proceedings of the 38th International SAMPE Symposium, 10–13 May 1993, pp. 679–693.

  7. M.J. Forkapa, C.R. Stidham, B.A. Banks, S.K. Rutledge, D.H. Ma, E.A. Sechkar, Third International Conference on Protection of Materials and Structures from the Low Earth Orbit Space Environment, Toronto, Canada, 25–26 April 1996, NASA TM-107212.

  8. B.A. Banks, R. Demko, Atomic Oxygen Protection of Materials in Low Earth Orbit, NASA TM-2002-211360 (February 2002).

  9. B.A. Banks, K.K. de Groh, S.K. Rutledge, C.A. Haytas, 44th Annual Meeting by the International Society of Optical Engineering, Denver, CO, 21 July 1999, NASA TM-1999-209179.

  10. LDEF-69 Months in Space, First Post-Retrieval Symposium, A.S. Levine, Ed., NASA Conference Publication 3134, Parts 1–3, Kissimmee, FL, 2–8 June 1991.

  11. K.K. de Groh, B.A. Banks, J.A. Dever, D.A. Jaworske, S.K. Miller, E.A. Sechkar, S.R. Panko, NASA Glenn Research Center ’s Materials International Space Station Experiments (MISSE 1–7), International Symposium on SM/MPAC and SEED Experiments (JAXA), Epochal Tsukuba, Japan, 10–11 March 2008, NASA TM-2008-215482.

  12. B.A. Banks, J.A. Backus, M.V. Manno, D.L. Waters, K.C. Cameron, K.K. de Groh, in Atomic Oxygen Erosion Yield Prediction for Spacecraft Polymers in Low Earth Orbit, 11th International Symposium on Materials in the Space Environment (ISMSE-11), 15–18 September 2009.

  13. J. Dever, B. Banks, K. de Groh, S. Miller, in Handbook of Environmental Degradation of Materials, M. Kutz, Ed. (William Andrew Publishing, Norwich, NY, 2005), pp. 465–501.

  14. B.A. Banks, J.A. Dever, L. Gebauer, C.M. Hill, in Proceedings of the LDEF-69 Months in Space, First Post-Retrieval Symposium, NASA CP-3134, Part 2, 2–8 June 1991, pp. 801–815.

  15. H.G. Pippin, Analysis of Silverized Teflon Thermal Control Material Flown on the Long Duration Exposure Facility, NASA CR-4663 (July 1995).

  16. E.M. Silverman, Space Environmental Effects on Spacecraft: LEO Materials Selection Guide, NASA CR-4661 (August 1995).

  17. T. See, M. Allbrooks, D. Atkinson, C. Simon, M. Zolensky, “Meteoroid and Debris Impacts Features Documented on the Long Duration Exposure Facility,” (Preliminary Report Compiled by Members of the LDEF Meteoroid and Debris Special Investigation Group, NASA JSC 24608, August 1990).

  18. R.L. O’Neal, A.S. Levine, C.C. Kiser, Photographic Survey of the LDEF Mission, NASA SP-531 (1996).

  19. K.K. de Groh, B.A. Banks, J. Spacecr. Rockets 31 (4), 656 (1994).

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Miller, S.K.R., Banks, B. Degradation of Spacecraft Materials in the Space Environment. MRS Bulletin 35, 20–24 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1557/mrs2010.612

Download citation

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1557/mrs2010.612

Navigation