Abstract:
Ablatives are materials used to protect the inner hardware of aerospace structures
from the inimical temperature and shear environments. Fifty six diverse compositions have
been used with numerous incorporations (MWCNTs, nanokaolinite, nanomontmorillonite,
fine natural cork, phenolic resin, carbon fiber, Kevlar fiber, glass fiber, Spectra fiber, and
ceramic fiber) and elastomeric matrices ( ethylene propylene monomer, styrene butadiene,
silicon, and nitrile butadiene rubber) to fabricate polymer ablative composites for
hyperthermal/hypersonic environment encountered during the space vehicle and ballistic
missiles re-entry missions.
The reinforcements have been impregnated into the elastomeric matrices using
internal dispersion kneader and two-roller mixing mill. Three types of mold geometries
have been used according to ASTM standards to fabricate the composites on the hot
isostatic press to evaluate in-situ back-face temperature elevation, linear/radial ablation
resistance, and mechanical properties. High temperature ( ≈ 3000 o C) oxy–acetylene torch
coupled with the temperature data logging system was used to execute the ablation
measurements of the ablative composites.
Thermal stability and heat absorbing capability investigations have been carried out
on the TG/DTA equipment. Mechanical properties have been executed using Universal
Testing Machine (UTM) and rubber hardness tester. Scanning electron microscopy
coupled with the energy dispersive spectroscopy was performed to demonstrate the
reinforcement’s dispersion, interface quality, char morphology, char–reinforcement
interaction, and compositional analysis of the composites.
The ablation, thermal, and mechanical properties of the fabricated composites have
been positively influenced with increasing the concentration of the nanoclays/synthetic
fibers/nanotubes in the host rubber matrices. The least backface temperature evolution
under 200s flame exposure, best linear/radial/mass ablation resistance, and the utmost
improvement in tensile strength and elongation at break have been observed for 30 wt%
nanokaolinite and 7 wt% chopped Kevlar fiber impregnated ablative composites. High
thermal stability, heat quenching capability, low thermal conductivity, mechanical
strength, and remarkable reinforcement–matrix adhesion are identified as the most
viiprominent factors for enhanced ablation performance. The novelty of this research work is
the fabrication of new ablative formulations with augmented ablation resistance (linear
ablation rate of ~ 0.002mm/s) and back-face temperatures in the vicinity of 55 o C. This
compares with the ablation rates of 0.01mm/s and back-face temperatures 130 o C for
contemporary work using elastomeric composites under similar conditions. A host of
ablators have been ranked in terms of linear and radial ablation rate, backface temperature,
and mechanical strength following head-on impingement, or radial flow conditions of oxy-
acetylene flame. The designer can choose the appropriate combination of ablators for the
situation at hand using the ablation data provided in consolidated form towards the end of
the thesis.