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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Politecnico Di Milano |
| Country | Italy |
| Start Date | May 01, 2025 |
| End Date | Oct 31, 2028 |
| Duration | 1,279 days |
| Number of Grantees | 9 |
| Roles | Participant; Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101186901 |
This project develops a new method to manage the decommissioning of satellites through the use of on-board heat generation systems based on non-explosive thermite charges, called thermite-for-demise (T4D).
Thermites are mixtures of metal and metal oxide which can undergo spontaneous exothermic reactions even in vacuum, according to composition and production.
Pioneering projects have demonstrated that T4D may be used to damage space components and support their demise during atmospheric reentry.
However, its real world application needs the filling of knowledge gaps and practical problems: (A) the powdered form is not the best way to obtain localized reliable heat release; (B) the expected life cycle in a space mission has never been considered; (C) a strategy for T4D use is not available.
The project targets the maturation of T4D technology in three major steps. (1) New thermite-based composite materials granting thermite a structural consistency will be developed and their behavior characterized.
Environmental stress tests will secure their use across satellite lifecycle. (2) With these building blocks, heat-generating shapes and devices will be developed, supported by the experience of a large spacecraft integrator.
The heat transfer behavior of thermite-based objects will be modeled and validated under representative reentry conditions, in hypersonic wind tunnel.
Results will support the update of system-level reentry simulation tools and the definition of application strategy, further validated on demise test in wind tunnel with hardware of representative or simplified geometry from the selected use-cases, supplied by a space company. (3) All previous outcomes will support a cost-benefit analysis for T4D industrial implementation and its long term evolution.
The results of the project will demonstrate with new experiments and modeling approaches that T4D has the potential to become an engineering standard for the space community.
R.Tech; Htg - Hyperschall Techologie Göttigen Gmbh; Airbus Defence and Space Gmbh; Agenzia Nazionale Per Le Nuove Tecnologie, L'Energia E Lo Sviluppo Economico Sostenibile; Deutsches Zentrum Fur Luft - Und Raumfahrt Ev; Universite Jean Monnet; Reactive Powder Technology Srl; Politecnico Di Milano; Ceiia - Centro de Engenharia E Desenvolvimento (Associacao)
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