Industrial Productivity
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution
On October 14, 1947, Captain Charles “Chuck” Yeager made
history when he became the first pilot in an officially documented
flight to ever break the sound barrier. Flying a Bell XS-1
test jet over the Mohave Desert, Yeager hit approximately
700 miles per hour, when a loud boom thundered across the
barren landscape as he crossed from subsonic to supersonic
speeds. The sonic boom, akin to the wake of the plane’s shockwaves
in the air, occurred at Mach 1—the speed of sound (named
after Ernst Mach, an Austrian physicist whose work focused
on the Doppler effect and acoustics).
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The
X-43A flights were the first actual flight tests
of an
aircraft powered by a scramjet engine capable of operating
at
hypersonic speeds (above Mach 5, or five times the
speed
of sound). |
This eventually led to the famous 3-hour trans-Atlantic flights
of the Concorde, traveling at Mach 2, and the development
of fighter jets, which began routinely crossing the sound
barrier—the era of supersonic flight. At NASA, however, aerospace
engineers wanted to go faster—hypersonic or Mach 5; five
times the speed of sound. They continued to push the limits
of speed, setting a world record in October 1967, which held
for 35 years at Mach 6.7, in the NASA-designed X-15 aircraft.
Never content to rest on its laurels, the Space Agency wanted
to go even faster. NASA began the X-43A project, the purpose
of which was to go Mach 10. The “X” in the name, as in X-1
and X-15, signifies that these are experimental aircraft,
not intended for mass production, but built solely for flight
research, and the 43 indicates that it was the 43rd such
aircraft.
The major experimental feature of this particular aircraft
was a scramjet engine, which kicks in at about Mach 6. In
a normal jet engine, blades compress the air, but in the
scramjet, the combustion of hydrogen fuel in a stream of
air is compressed by the high speed of the aircraft itself.
To achieve Mach 10, the X-43A was first carried up into the
air attached to a B-52 and then “jumpstarted” with a Pegasus
rocket.
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The
first X-43A hypersonic research aircraft and its
modified Pegasus booster rocket were carried aloft
by NASA’s B-52 carrier aircraft from Dryden Flight
Research Center on June 2, 2001, for the first of
three high-speed free flight attempts. |
It was a multiyear experiment and involved building three
test vehicles. The first two were meant to reach speeds of
up to Mach 7, and the third was reaching for double digits:
Mach 10. NASA hoped that these three unmanned crafts would
allow aerospace engineers to further advance understanding
of hypersonic flight and that the lessons learned could be
applied to increase payload capacity for future vehicles,
including hypersonic aircraft and reusable space launchers.
Tullahoma, Tennessee-based ATK-GASL built the X-43A and its
engine, while the Huntington Beach, California-based Boeing
Company’s Phantom Works designed the thermal protection and
onboard system. The booster, a modified Pegasus rocket, was
built by Orbital Sciences Corporation at the company’s facility
in Chandler, Arizona. The program was jointly managed by
NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center and Langley Research
Center.
The first X-43A dropped from the B-52 carrier aircraft on
June 2, 2001 and spun out of control when the booster rocket
failed to operate properly. It was destroyed and allowed
to fall into the ocean. The second test vehicle launch was
a success, making the X-43A the fastest free-flying, air-breathing
aircraft in the world. On November 16, 2004, NASA launched
the third X-43A scramjet aircraft, which reached record-breaking
speeds near Mach 9.8 at an altitude of around 110,000 feet.
The aircraft still holds the Guinness World Record.
Partnership
Through research contracts with NASA, Materials
and Electrochemical Research Corporation (MER), of Tucson, Arizona, contributed
a number of technologies to these record-breaking flights.
Over the course of 6 years, MER completed Phase II Small
Business Innovation Research (SBIR) contracts with Goddard
Space Flight Center, Langley Research Center, the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Johnson Space Center, and Marshall Space Flight
Center. By partnering with NASA through these contracts,
MER developed a coating that successfully passed testing
at simulated Mach 10 conditions, and provided several carbon-carbon
(C-C) composite components for the flights.
MER created all of the leading edges for the X-43A test vehicles
at Dryden. Considered the most critical parts of this experimental
craft, the leading edges had several specific requirements.
As the vehicle’s speed increased, so did heat and thermal
load, approaching 4,000 °F, well above the temperatures the
shuttle is exposed to during reentry. In addition to being
very heat resistant, the coating had to be very lightweight
and thin, as the aircraft was designed to very precise specifications
and could not afford to have a bulky coating.
In total, 11 C-C leading edges were created for the nose,
the chines (the areas where the body meets the wing), the
verticals, and 2 horizontals. These parts were made with
P-30X graphite fibers, using a liquid matrix process. A very
high process temperature was utilized to render the high-thermal
conductivity. The parts were first processed in the form
of a C-C billet, and then machined to NASA specifications.
Oxidation protection was achieved by a dual chemical vapor
reaction and chemical vapor deposition process.
Product Outcome
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MER’s
carbon-carbon composites are very lightweight, yet
still have great strength and stiffness, even at
very high temperatures. |
To take advantage of commercializing these specialized composites,
MER patented its C-C composite process and then formed a
spinoff company, Frontier Materials Corporation (FMC), in
Tucson, Arizona. FMC is using the patent in conjunction with
low-cost PAN (polyacrylonitrile)-based fibers to introduce
these materials to the commercial markets.
The C-C composites are very lightweight, yet still have great
strength and stiffness, even at very high temperatures. They
can be produced with either low- or high-thermal conductivity,
and when graphitized, they have superior electrical conductivity.
Even with all of these characteristics, the carbon composites
are still relatively inexpensive.
The composites have been used in industrial heating applications,
the automotive and aerospace industries, as well as in glass
manufacturing and on semiconductors. C-C composites have
been used in industrial heating fixtures in the form of structural
flat panels, structural members for panel support, and for
nuts and bolts. In the automotive industry, the composites
have been useful for engine components, brakes, cylinder
liners, and panels. Aerospace applications have included
missile bodies, leading edges, and structured components.
Applications also include transfer components for glass manufacturing
and structural members for carrier support in semiconductor
processing.




