A
thermal protection system, or TPS, is the barrier that protects a
spacecraft during the searing heat of atmospheric reentry. Multiple approaches for the thermal protection of spacecraft are in use, among them ablative heat shields, passive cooling, and active cooling of spacecraft surfaces. In general they can be divided into two categories: ablative TPS and reusable TPS. Ablative TPS are required when space craft reach a relatively low altitude before slowing down. Spacecraft like the space shuttle are designed to slow down at high altitude so that they can use reuseable TPS. (see:
Space Shuttle thermal protection system). Thermal protection systems are tested in high enthalpy ground testing or plasma wind tunnels that reproduce the combination of high enthalpy and high stagnation pressure using
Induction plasma or DC plasma.
Ablative capsule The
ablative heat shield functions by lifting the hot shock layer gas away from the heat shield's outer wall (creating a cooler
boundary layer). The boundary layer comes from
blowing of gaseous reaction products from the heat shield material and provides protection against all forms of heat flux. The overall process of reducing the heat flux experienced by the heat shield's outer wall by way of a boundary layer is called
blockage. Ablation occurs at two levels in an ablative TPS: the outer surface of the TPS material chars, melts, and
sublimes, while the bulk of the TPS material undergoes
pyrolysis and expels product gases. The gas produced by pyrolysis is what drives blowing and causes blockage of convective and catalytic heat flux.
Pyrolysis can be measured in real time using
thermogravimetric analysis, so that the ablative performance can be evaluated. Ablation can also provide blockage against radiative heat flux by introducing carbon into the shock layer thus making it optically opaque. Radiative heat flux blockage was the primary thermal protection mechanism of the
Galileo Probe TPS material (carbon phenolic). Early research on ablation technology in the United States was centered at
NASA's
Ames Research Center located at
Moffett Field, California.
Ames Research Center was ideal, since it had numerous
wind tunnels capable of generating varying wind velocities. Initial experiments typically mounted a mock-up of the ablative material to be analyzed within a
hypersonic wind tunnel. Testing of ablative materials occurs at the
Ames Arc Jet Complex. Many spacecraft thermal protection systems have been tested in this facility, including the Apollo, Space Shuttle, and
Orion heat shield materials. '' during final assembly showing the aeroshell, cruise ring and solid rocket motor
Carbon phenolic Carbon phenolic was originally developed as a rocket nozzle throat material (used in the
Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster) and for reentry-vehicle nose tips. The
thermal conductivity of a particular TPS material is usually proportional to the material's density. Carbon phenolic is a very effective ablative material, but also has high density which is undesirable. The NASA
Galileo Probe used carbon phenolic for its TPS material. If the heat flux experienced by an entry vehicle is insufficient to cause pyrolysis then the TPS material's conductivity could allow heat flux conduction into the TPS bondline material thus leading to TPS failure. Consequently, for entry trajectories causing lower heat flux, carbon phenolic is sometimes inappropriate and lower-density TPS materials such as the following examples can be better design choices:
Super light-weight ablator SLA in
SLA-561V stands for
super light-weight ablator. SLA-561V is a proprietary ablative made by
Lockheed Martin that has been used as the primary TPS material on all of the 70° sphere-cone entry vehicles sent by NASA to Mars other than the
Mars Science Laboratory (MSL). SLA-561V begins significant ablation at a heat flux of approximately 110 W/cm2, but will fail for heat fluxes greater than 300 W/cm2. The MSL aeroshell TPS is currently designed to withstand a peak heat flux of 234 W/cm2. The peak heat flux experienced by the
Viking 1 aeroshell which landed on Mars was 21 W/cm2. For
Viking 1, the TPS acted as a charred thermal insulator and never experienced significant ablation.
Viking 1 was the first Mars lander and based upon a very conservative design. The Viking aeroshell had a base diameter of 3.54 meters (the largest used on Mars until Mars Science Laboratory). SLA-561V is applied by packing the ablative material into a honeycomb core that is pre-bonded to the aeroshell's structure thus enabling construction of a large heat shield.
Phenolic-impregnated carbon ablator Sample return capsule at USAF Utah Range.|left
Phenolic-impregnated carbon ablator (PICA) is a
carbon fiber preform impregnated in
phenolic resin. It has the advantages of low density (much lighter than carbon phenolic) coupled with efficient ablative ability at high heat flux. It is a good choice for ablative applications such as high-peak-heating conditions found on sample-return missions or lunar-return missions. PICA's thermal conductivity is lower than other high-heat-flux-ablative materials, such as conventional carbon phenolics. PICA was patented by
NASA Ames Research Center in the 1990s and was the primary TPS material for the
Stardust aeroshell. The Stardust sample-return capsule was the fastest man-made object ever to reenter Earth's atmosphere, at 28,000 mph (ca. 12.5 km/s) at 135 km altitude. This was faster than the Apollo mission capsules and 70% faster than the Shuttle. PICA was critical for the viability of the Stardust mission, which returned to Earth in 2006. Stardust's heat shield (0.81 m base diameter) was made of one monolithic piece sized to withstand a nominal peak heating rate of 1.2 kW/cm2. A PICA heat shield was also used for the
Mars Science Laboratory entry into the
Martian atmosphere. The first reentry test of a PICA-X heat shield was on the
Dragon C1 mission on 8 December 2010. The PICA-X heat shield was designed, developed and fully qualified by a small team of a dozen engineers and technicians in less than four years. PICA-X is ten times less expensive to manufacture than the NASA PICA heat shield material.
PICA-3 A second enhanced version of PICA—called PICA-3—was developed by SpaceX during the mid-2010s. It was first flight tested on the
Crew Dragon spacecraft in 2019 during the
flight demonstration mission, in April 2019, and put into regular service on that spacecraft in 2020.
HARLEM PICA and most other ablative TPS materials are either proprietary or classified, with formulations and manufacturing processes not disclosed in the open literature. This limits the ability of researchers to study these materials and hinders the development of thermal protection systems. Thus, the High Enthalpy Flow Diagnostics Group (HEFDiG) at the
University of Stuttgart has developed an open carbon-phenolic ablative material, called the HEFDiG Ablation-Research Laboratory Experiment Material (HARLEM), from commercially available materials. HARLEM is prepared by impregnating a preform of a carbon fiber porous monolith (such as Calcarb rigid carbon insulation) with a solution of resole phenolic resin and
polyvinylpyrrolidone in
ethylene glycol, heating to polymerize the resin and then removing the solvent under vacuum. The resulting material is
cured and machined to the desired shape.
SIRCA impactor aeroshell, a classic 45° sphere-cone with spherical section afterbody, enabling aerodynamic stability from atmospheric entry to surface impact Silicone-impregnated reusable ceramic ablator (SIRCA) was also developed at NASA Ames Research Center and was used on the Backshell Interface Plate (BIP) of the
Mars Pathfinder and
Mars Exploration Rover (MER) aeroshells. The BIP was at the attachment points between the aeroshell's backshell (also called the afterbody or aft cover) and the cruise ring (also called the cruise stage). SIRCA was also the primary TPS material for the unsuccessful
Deep Space 2 (DS/2) Mars
impactor probes with their aeroshells. SIRCA is a monolithic, insulating material that can provide thermal protection through ablation. It is the only TPS material that can be machined to custom shapes and then applied directly to the spacecraft. There is no post-processing, heat treating, or additional coatings required (unlike Space Shuttle tiles). Since SIRCA can be machined to precise shapes, it can be applied as tiles, leading edge sections, full nose caps, or in any number of custom shapes or sizes. , SIRCA had been demonstrated in backshell interface applications, but not yet as a forebody TPS material.
AVCOAT AVCOAT is composed of silica fibers in an epoxy novolac resin. It is used in the design of several ablative heat shields. NASA originally used it for the
Apollo command module in the 1960s, and then utilized the material for its next-generation beyond low Earth orbit
Orion crew module, which first flew in a December 2014 test and then operationally in November 2022. The Avcoat to be used on Orion has been reformulated to meet environmental legislation that has been passed since the end of Apollo.
Thermal soak Thermal soak is a part of almost all TPS schemes. For example, an ablative heat shield loses most of its thermal protection effectiveness when the outer wall temperature drops below the minimum necessary for pyrolysis. From that time to the end of the heat pulse, heat from the shock layer convects into the heat shield's outer wall and would eventually conduct to the payload. This outcome can be prevented by ejecting the heat shield (with its heat soak) prior to the heat conducting to the inner wall.
Refractory insulation takes a close look at TPS tiles underneath
Space Shuttle Atlantis. tiles were used on the
Space Shuttle. Refractory insulation keeps the heat in the outermost layer of the spacecraft surface, where it is conducted away by the air. The temperature of the surface rises to incandescent levels, so the material must have a very high melting point, and the material must also exhibit very low thermal conductivity. Materials with these properties tend to be brittle, delicate, and difficult to fabricate in large sizes, so they are generally fabricated as relatively small tiles that are then attached to the structural skin of the spacecraft. There is a tradeoff between toughness and thermal conductivity: less conductive materials are generally more brittle. The space shuttle used multiple types of tiles. Tiles are also used on the
Boeing X-37,
Dream Chaser, and
Starship's upper stage. Because insulation cannot be perfect, some heat energy is stored in the insulation and in the underlying material ("thermal soaking") and must be dissipated after the spacecraft exits the high-temperature flight regime. Some of this heat will re-radiate through the surface or will be carried off the surface by convection, but some will heat the spacecraft structure and interior, which may require active cooling after landing.
Passively cooled ) originally used a radiatively cooled TPS, but was later converted to an ablative TPS. In some early ballistic missile RVs (e.g., the Mk-2 and the
sub-orbital Mercury spacecraft),
radiatively cooled TPS were used to initially absorb heat flux during the heat pulse, and, then, after the heat pulse, radiate and convect the stored heat back into the atmosphere. However, the earlier version of this technique required a considerable quantity of metal TPS (e.g.,
titanium,
beryllium,
copper, etc.). Modern designers prefer to avoid this added mass by using ablative and thermal-soak TPS instead. Thermal protection systems relying on
emissivity use high emissivity coatings (HECs) to facilitate
radiative cooling, while an underlying porous ceramic layer serves to protect the structure from high surface temperatures. High thermally stable emissivity values coupled with low thermal conductivity are key to the functionality of such systems. Radiatively cooled TPS can be found on modern entry vehicles, but
reinforced carbon–carbon (RCC) (also called
carbon–carbon) is normally used instead of metal. RCC was the TPS material on the Space Shuttle's nose cone and wing leading edges, and was also proposed as the leading-edge material for the
X-33.
Carbon is the most refractory material known, with a one-atmosphere sublimation temperature of for graphite. This high temperature made carbon an obvious choice as a radiatively cooled TPS material. Disadvantages of RCC are that it is currently expensive to manufacture, is heavy, and lacks robust impact resistance. Some high-velocity
aircraft, such as the
SR-71 Blackbird and
Concorde, deal with heating similar to that experienced by spacecraft, but at much lower intensity, and for hours at a time. Studies of the SR-71's titanium skin revealed that the metal structure was restored to its original strength through
annealing due to aerodynamic heating. In the case of the Concorde, the
aluminium nose was permitted to reach a maximum
operating temperature of (approximately warmer than the normally sub-zero, ambient air); the metallurgical implications (loss of
temper) that would be associated with a higher peak temperature were the most significant factors determining the top speed of the aircraft. A radiatively cooled TPS for an entry vehicle is often called a
hot-metal TPS. Early TPS designs for the Space Shuttle called for a hot-metal TPS based upon a nickel
superalloy (dubbed
René 41) and titanium shingles. This Shuttle TPS concept was rejected, because it was believed a silica tile-based TPS would involve lower development and manufacturing costs. A nickel
superalloy-shingle TPS was again proposed for the unsuccessful
X-33 single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) prototype. Recently, newer radiatively cooled TPS materials have been developed that could be superior to RCC. Known as
Ultra-High Temperature Ceramics, they were developed for the prototype vehicle Slender Hypervelocity Aerothermodynamic Research Probe (SHARP). These TPS materials are based on
zirconium diboride and
hafnium diboride. SHARP TPS have suggested performance improvements allowing for sustained
Mach 7 flight at sea level, Mach 11 flight at altitudes, and significant improvements for vehicles designed for continuous hypersonic flight. SHARP TPS materials enable sharp leading edges and nose cones to greatly reduce drag for airbreathing combined-cycle-propelled spaceplanes and lifting bodies. SHARP materials have exhibited effective TPS characteristics from zero to more than , with melting points over . They are structurally stronger than RCC, and, thus, do not require structural reinforcement with materials such as Inconel. SHARP materials are extremely efficient at reradiating absorbed heat, thus eliminating the need for additional TPS behind and between the SHARP materials and conventional vehicle structure. NASA initially funded (and discontinued) a multi-phase R&D program through the
University of Montana in 2001 to test SHARP materials on test vehicles.
Actively cooled Various advanced reusable spacecraft and hypersonic aircraft designs have been proposed to employ heat shields made from temperature-resistant metal
alloys that incorporate a refrigerant or cryogenic fuel circulating through them. Such a TPS concept was proposed for the
X-30 National Aerospace Plane (NASP) in the mid-80s. The NASP was supposed to have been a
scramjet powered hypersonic aircraft, but failed in development. In 2005 and 2012, two unmanned
lifting body craft with actively cooled hulls were launched as a part of the German
Sharp Edge Flight Experiment (SHEFEX). In early 2019,
SpaceX was developing an actively cooled heat shield for its
Starship spacecraft where a part of the thermal protection system will be a
transpirationally cooled outer-skin design for the reentering spaceship. However, SpaceX abandoned this approach in favor of a modern version of heat shield tiles later in 2019. The
Stoke Space Nova second stage, announced in October 2023 and not yet flying, uses a regeneratively cooled (by liquid hydrogen) heat shield. In the early 1960s various TPS systems were proposed to use water or other cooling liquid sprayed into the shock layer, or passed through channels in the heat shield. Advantages included the possibility of more all-metal designs which would be cheaper to develop, be more rugged, and eliminate the need for classified and unknown technology. The disadvantages are increased weight and complexity, and lower reliability. The concept has never been flown, but a similar technology (the plug nozzle) did undergo extensive ground testing.
Propulsive entry Fuel permitting, nothing prevents a vehicle from entering the atmosphere with a retrograde engine burn, which has the double effect of slowing the vehicle down much faster than atmospheric drag alone would, and forcing the compressed hot air away from the vehicle's body. During reentry, the first stage of the SpaceX
Falcon 9 performs an entry burn to rapidly decelerate from its initial hypersonic speed. ==High-drag suborbital entry==