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Technical Paper

Fluorocarbon and PTFE Thermodegradation and Contamination Modeling in a Space Habitat

1993-07-01
932146
The products of thermodegradation of fluorocarbon polymers (found in electrical insulation) will be toxic to space habitat crews, and the monitoring and detection of such contaminants are important to space environmental health. Experiments are therefore being performed on the thermodegradation of a liquid perfluoroalkane mixture (consisting of perfluorohexanes, C6F14, and −5% perfluoropentane, C5F12), similar in structure to polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE - Teflon), in atmospheres of varying oxygen concentration. PTFE is a common material used on space vehicles for insulation of wires. When PTFE is thermally degraded, such as from the overheating of a wire and subsequent smoldering of the insulation, it may produce toxic compounds ranging from carbonyl fluoride and hydrogen fluoride through perfluorinated aromatic compounds to ultrafine particles.
Technical Paper

Physics, Chemistry and Pulmonary Sequelae of Thermodegradation Events in Long-Mission Space Flight

1993-07-01
932144
An event in which electronic insulation consisting of polytetrafluoroethylene undergoes thermodegradation on the Space Station Freedom is considered experimentally and theoretically from the initial chemistry and convective transport through pulmonary deposition in humans. The low-gravity environment impacts various stages of event simulation. Vapor-phase and particulate thermodegradation products were considered as potential spacecraft contaminants. A potential pathway for the production of ultrafine particles was identified. Different approaches to the simulation and prediction of contaminant transport were studied and used to predict the distribution of generic vapor-phase products in a Space Station model.
Technical Paper

Investigation of Stress Effects Between Equal Diameter Holes in a Perforated Stip

1977-02-01
770462
Solutions developed by Chih-Bing Ling in two dimensional elasticity are used to investigate stresses in a perforated strip under pure tension. Results of a strain gage test show close correlation with the two dimensional theory of elasticity. A series of curves are plotted to show the effects of stress for various configurations of hole size, hole spacing, and strip width. Areas of investigation are between the holes and at ninety degrees to the tensile axis.
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