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Featured researches published by Paul Karlmann.


42nd International Conference on Environmental Systems | 2012

From Concept-to-Flight: An Active Active Fluid Loop Based Thermal Control System for Mars Science Laboratory Rover

Gajanana C. Birur; Pradeep Bhandari; David Bame; Paul Karlmann; A. J. Mastropietro; Yuanming Liu; Jennifer Miller; Michael Pauken; Jacqueline Lyra

The Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) rover, Curiosity, which was launched on November 26, 2011, incorporates a novel active thermal control system to keep the sensitive electronics and science instruments at safe operating and survival temperatures. While the diurnal temperature variations on the Mars surface range from -120 C to +30 C, the sensitive equipment are kept within -40 C to +50 C. The active thermal control system is based on a single-phase mechanically pumped fluid loop (MPFL) system which removes or recovers excess waste heat and manages it to maintain the sensitive equipment inside the rover at safe temperatures. This paper will describe the entire process of developing this active thermal control system for the MSL rover from concept to flight implementation. The development of the rover thermal control system during its architecture, design, fabrication, integration, testing, and launch is described.


42nd International Conference on Environmental Systems | 2012

Design of Accumulators and Liquid/Gas Charging of Single Phase Mechanically Pumped Fluid Loop Heat Rejection Systems

Pradeep Bhandari; Brenda A. Dudik; Gajanana C. Birur; Paul Karlmann; David Bame; A. J. Mastropietro

For single phase mechanically pumped fluid loops used for thermal control of spacecraft, a gas charged accumulator is typically used to modulate pressures within the loop. This is needed to accommodate changes in the working fluid volume due to changes in the operating temperatures as the spacecraft encounters varying thermal environments during its mission. Overall, the three key requirements on the accumulator to maintain an appropriate pressure range throughout the mission are: accommodation of the volume change of the fluid due to temperature changes, avoidance of pump cavitation and prevention of boiling in the liquid. The sizing and design of such an accumulator requires very careful and accurate accounting of temperature distribution within each element of the working fluid for the entire range of conditions expected, accurate knowledge of volume of each fluid element, assessment of corresponding pressures needed to avoid boiling in the liquid, as well as the pressures needed to avoid cavitation in the pump. The appropriate liquid and accumulator strokes required to accommodate the liquid volume change, as well as the appropriate gas volumes, require proper sizing to ensure that the correct pressure range is maintained during the mission. Additionally, a very careful assessment of the process for charging both the gas side and the liquid side of the accumulator is required to properly position the bellows and pressurize the system to a level commensurate with requirements. To achieve the accurate sizing of the accumulator and the charging of the system, sophisticated EXCEL based spreadsheets were developed to rapidly come up with an accumulator design and the corresponding charging parameters. These spreadsheets have proven to be computationally fast and accurate tools for this purpose. This paper will describe the entire process of designing and charging the system, using a case study of the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) fluid loops, which is en route to Mars for an August 2012 landing.


41st International Conference on Environmental Systems | 2011

CO2 Insulation for Thermal Control of the Mars Science Laboratory

Pradeep Bhandari; Paul Karlmann; Kevin R. Anderson; Keith S. Novak

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is sending a large (>850 kg) rover as part of the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) mission to Mars in 2011. The rovers primary power source is a Multi-Mission Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator (MMRTG) that generates roughly 2000 W of heat, which is converted to approximately 110 W of electrical power for use by the rover electronics, science instruments, and mechanism-actuators. The large rover size and extreme thermal environments (cold and hot) for which the rover is designed for led to a sophisticated thermal control system to keep it within allowable temperature limits. The pre-existing Martian atmosphere of low thermal conductivity CO2 gas (8 Torr) is used to thermally protect the rover and its components from the extremely cold Martian environment (temperatures as low as -130 deg C). Conventional vacuum based insulation like Multi Layer Insulation (MLI) is not effective in a gaseous atmosphere, so engineered gaps between the warm rover internal components and the cold rover external structure were employed to implement this thermal isolation. Large gaps would lead to more thermal isolation, but would also require more of the precious volume available within the rover. Therefore, a balance of the degree of thermal isolation achieved vs. the volume of rover utilized is required to reach an acceptable design. The temperature differences between the controlled components and the rover structure vary from location to location so each gap has to be evaluated on a case-by-case basis to arrive at an optimal thickness. For every configuration and temperature difference, there is a critical thickness below which the heat transfer mechanism is dominated by simple gaseous thermal conduction. For larger gaps, the mechanism is dominated by natural convection. In general, convection leads to a poorer level of thermal isolation as compared to conduction. All these considerations play important roles in the optimization process. A three-step process was utilized to design this insulation. The first step is to come up with a simple, textbook based, closed-form equation assessment of gap thickness vs. resultant thermal isolation achieved. The second step is a more sophisticated numerical assessment using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) software to investigate the effect of complicated geometries and temperature contours along them to arrive at the effective thermal isolation in a CO2 atmosphere. The third step is to test samples of representative geometries in a CO2 filled chamber to measure the thermal isolation achieved. The results of these assessments along with the consistency checks across these methods leads to the formulation of design-guidelines for gap implementation within the rover geometry. Finally, based on the geometric and functional constraints within the real rover system, a detailed design that accommodates all these factors is arrived at. This paper will describe in detail this entire process, the results of these assessments and the final design that was implemented.


33rd Joint Propulsion Conference and Exhibit | 1997

Adsorption Compressor For Acquisition and Compression aof Atmospheric C02 on Mars

Donald Rapp; Paul Karlmann; David L. Clark; Chad M. Carr

A flight-prototype zeolite adsorption compressor is being developed as a reliable, efficient, cost-effective means of extracting and compressing atmospheric C02 on the surface of Mars for use as the first stage of a Mars in-sity C02 to 02 chemical conversion process.


43rd International Conference on Environmental Systems | 2013

Leak Mitigation in Mechanically Pumped Fluid Loops for Long Duration Space Missions

Jennifer Miller; Gajanana C. Birur; David Bame; A. J. Mastropietro; Pradeep Bhandari; Darlene Lee; Paul Karlmann; Yuanming Liu

Mechanically pumped fluid loops (MPFLs) are increasingly considered for spacecraft thermal control. A concern for long duration space missions is the leak of fluid leading to performance degradation or potential loop failure. An understanding of leak rate through analysis, as well as destructive and non-destructive testing, provides a verifiable means to quantify leak rates. The system can be appropriately designed to maintain safe operating pressures and temperatures throughout the mission. Two MPFLs on the Mars Science Laboratory Spacecraft, launched November 26, 2011, maintain the temperature of sensitive electronics and science instruments within a -40°C to 50°C range during launch, cruise, and Mars surface operations. With over 100 meters of complex tubing, fittings, joints, flex lines, and pumps, the system must maintain a minimum pressure through all phases of the mission to provide appropriate performance. This paper describes the process of design, qualification, test, verification, and validation of the components and assemblies employed to minimize risks associated with excessive fluid leaks from pumped fluid loop systems.


43rd International Conference on Environmental Systems | 2013

Performance of the Mechanically Pumped Fluid Loop Rover Heat Rejection System Used for Thermal Control of the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity Rover on the Surface of Mars

Pradeep Bhandari; Gajanana C. Birur; David Bame; A. J. Mastropietro; Jennifer Miller; Paul Karlmann; Yuanming Liu; Kevin R. Anderson

The challenging range of landing sites for which the Mars Science Laboratory Rover was designed, required a rover thermal management system that is capable of keeping temperatures controlled across a wide variety of environmental conditions. On the Martian surface where temperatures can be as cold as -123C and as warm as 38C, the Rover relies upon a Mechanically Pumped Fluid Loop (MPFL) Rover Heat Rejection System (RHRS) and external radiators to maintain the temperature of sensitive electronics and science instruments within a -40C to +50C range. The RHRS harnesses some of the waste heat generated from the Rover power source, known as the Multi Mission Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator (MMRTG), for use as survival heat for the rover during cold conditions. The MMRTG produces 110 Watts of electrical power while generating waste heat equivalent to approximately 2000 Watts. Heat exchanger plates (hot plates) positioned close to the MMRTG pick up this survival heat from it by radiative heat transfer and supply it to the rover. This design is the first instance of use of a RHRS for thermal control of a rover or lander on the surface of a planet. After an extremely successful landing on Mars (August 5), the rover and the RHRS have performed flawlessly for close to an earth year (half the nominal mission life). This paper will share the performance of the RHRS on the Martian surface as well as compare it to its predictions.


SAE International Journal of Aerospace | 2008

Development of Passively Actuated Thermal Control Valves for Passive Control of Mechanically Pumped Single-Phase Fluid Loops for Space Applications

Gajanana C. Birur; Mauro Prina; Pradeep Bhandari; Paul Karlmann; Brenda J. Hernandez; Bradley Kinter; Phillip Wilson; David Bame; Gani B. Ganapathi


SAE International Journal of Aerospace | 2009

Mars Science Laboratory Mechanically Pumped Fluid Loop for Thermal Control - Design, Implementation, and Testing

Pradeep Bhandari; Gajanana C. Birur; Paul Karlmann; David Bame; Yuanming Liu; A. J. Mastropietro; Jennifer Miller; Michael Pauken; Gani B. Ganapathi; Robert Krylo; Brad Kinter


Space 2000 Conference and Exposition | 2000

The 2001 Mars In-situ-propellant-production Precursor (MIP) Flight Demonstration - Project objectives and qualification test results

David Kaplan; R. Baird; Howard Flynn; James Ratliff; Cosmo Baraona; Phillip P. Jenkins; Geoffrey A. Landis; David A. Scheiman; Kenneth R. Johnson; Paul Karlmann; al e


Archive | 2002

Mars exploration rover athena

Randel Lindemann; Richard Rainen; Christopher Voorhees; James Stone; Joseph Melko; Paul Karlmann; Kobie T. Boykins; Brian Harrington; Lawrence Lee; Jason Suchman; Satish Krishnan; Lori Shiraishi; Michael Thelen; Annette K. Nasif; Joseph Vacchione; Kevin Burke

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Pradeep Bhandari

California Institute of Technology

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Gajanana C. Birur

California Institute of Technology

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David Bame

California Institute of Technology

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A. J. Mastropietro

California Institute of Technology

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Jennifer Miller

California Institute of Technology

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Yuanming Liu

California Institute of Technology

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Donald Rapp

University of Texas at Dallas

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Gani B. Ganapathi

California Institute of Technology

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Kenneth R. Johnson

California Institute of Technology

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Mauro Prina

California Institute of Technology

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