The total hemispheric emissivity of painted aluminum honeycomb at cryogenic temperatures

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Abstract

NASA uses high-emissivity surfaces on deep-space radiators and thermal radiation absorbers in test chambers. Aluminum honeycomb core material, when coated with a high-emissivity paint, provides a lightweight, mechanically robust, and relatively inexpensive black surface that retains its high emissivity down to low temperatures. At temperatures below about 100 Kelvin, this material performs much better than the paint itself. We measured the total hemispheric emissivity of various painted honeycomb configurations using an adaptation of an innovative technique developed for characterizing thin black coatings. These measurements were performed from room temperature down to 30 Kelvin. We describe the measurement technique and compare the results with predictions from a detailed thermal model of each honeycomb configuration.

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Tuttle, J., Canavan, E., Dipirro, M., Li, X., & Knollenberg, P. (2014). The total hemispheric emissivity of painted aluminum honeycomb at cryogenic temperatures. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1573, pp. 590–596). American Institute of Physics Inc. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4860755

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