The use of electrical transmission line theory to predict the performance of spacecraft radiators

The cascade algorithm that is used for extended surface analysis depends on a new parameterization called the thermal transmission matrix to represent a single fin. This thermal transmission matrix, which is intended to replace the more familiar fin efficiency as a design and analysis parameterizati...

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Main Author: Smith, Steven M.
Other Authors: Kraus, Allan D.
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/27324
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-273242014-11-27T16:16:48Z The use of electrical transmission line theory to predict the performance of spacecraft radiators Smith, Steven M. Kraus, Allan D. NA NA Electrical Engineering;Space Systems Engineering The cascade algorithm that is used for extended surface analysis depends on a new parameterization called the thermal transmission matrix to represent a single fin. This thermal transmission matrix, which is intended to replace the more familiar fin efficiency as a design and analysis parameterization, is a linear transformation that maps conditions of heat flow and temperature at the fin tip to heat flow and temperature conditions at the fin base. The cascade algorithm was derived by resorting to an analogy between a fin and the electrical transmission line. The cascade algorithm permits a fin to be subdivided into many subfins each having a thermal transmission matrix and then the individual transmission matrices for each of the subfins can be used, via a simple matrix product to form an overall equivalent thermal transmission matrix for the entire fin. This thesis develops a thermal transmission matrix for the radiating rectangular, trapezoidal, and triangular fins both for the free space and non-free space environments. Test cases have been run and their solutions exactly match those contained in the literature. The thesis concludes with optimization studies for Thermal Transmission Matrix, Cascade Algorithm, Extended Surface, Cooling Fin, Radiative Fin, Longitudinal Fin, Rectangular Fin, Trapezoidal Fin, Triangular Fin, Optimum 2013-01-23T22:12:42Z 2013-01-23T22:12:42Z 1992-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/27324 ocm303405864 en_US Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description The cascade algorithm that is used for extended surface analysis depends on a new parameterization called the thermal transmission matrix to represent a single fin. This thermal transmission matrix, which is intended to replace the more familiar fin efficiency as a design and analysis parameterization, is a linear transformation that maps conditions of heat flow and temperature at the fin tip to heat flow and temperature conditions at the fin base. The cascade algorithm was derived by resorting to an analogy between a fin and the electrical transmission line. The cascade algorithm permits a fin to be subdivided into many subfins each having a thermal transmission matrix and then the individual transmission matrices for each of the subfins can be used, via a simple matrix product to form an overall equivalent thermal transmission matrix for the entire fin. This thesis develops a thermal transmission matrix for the radiating rectangular, trapezoidal, and triangular fins both for the free space and non-free space environments. Test cases have been run and their solutions exactly match those contained in the literature. The thesis concludes with optimization studies for Thermal Transmission Matrix, Cascade Algorithm, Extended Surface, Cooling Fin, Radiative Fin, Longitudinal Fin, Rectangular Fin, Trapezoidal Fin, Triangular Fin, Optimum
author2 Kraus, Allan D.
author_facet Kraus, Allan D.
Smith, Steven M.
author Smith, Steven M.
spellingShingle Smith, Steven M.
The use of electrical transmission line theory to predict the performance of spacecraft radiators
author_sort Smith, Steven M.
title The use of electrical transmission line theory to predict the performance of spacecraft radiators
title_short The use of electrical transmission line theory to predict the performance of spacecraft radiators
title_full The use of electrical transmission line theory to predict the performance of spacecraft radiators
title_fullStr The use of electrical transmission line theory to predict the performance of spacecraft radiators
title_full_unstemmed The use of electrical transmission line theory to predict the performance of spacecraft radiators
title_sort use of electrical transmission line theory to predict the performance of spacecraft radiators
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/27324
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