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3 min read

Our Work Continued in a Challenging Year

Despite a year dominated by a pandemic, our work at NASA Glenn continued both in helping our health care community respond to the challenges of COVID-19 and in advancing science and technology.

Our collaboration with University Hospitals of Cleveland developed new methods and technologies for decontaminating personal protective equipment (PPE) for aerospace applications and for safeguarding the health of workers caring for patients with coronavirus.

Female and male doctor, wearing masks, standing on either side of the device.
Doctors Amrita John and Shine Raju at UH Cleveland Medical Center with the device that decontaminates masks using atomic oxygen.
Credits: University Hospitals

Meanwhile, NASA got to work across the country providing expertise for the pandemic response, while our engineers worked with a local company to update a sterilizing device.

Person sterilizing.
With help from NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, the company Emergency Products and Research (EP+R) improved its AMBUstat sterilant. Jason Thompson of EP+R tests a new system that lets the AMBUstat G2 device quickly sterilize small spaces, like the inside of a police car.
Credits: Emergency Products and Research

Working on space technology didn’t stop either as we continued to prepare a 2021 lunar lander experiment to test new solar power cells.

In a NASA lab, a male researcher in a white laboratory coat with latex gloves, dips a brush into a beaker filled with adhesive.
Researcher Tim Peshek brushes an adhesive onto the top of the PILS payload in order to adhere the solar cells to the front surface of the experiment.
Credits: NASA

Experts in our SLOPE lab refined shape memory alloy tires for future rovers and made preparations to continue testing a model of the VIPER rover that will map water ice on the Moon.

An engineering model of the VIPER in the Simulated Lunar Operations Laboratory at NASA’s Glenn Research Center
Engineers test the Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover, which will roam around the Moon’s South Pole looking for water ice in the region.
Credits: NASA/ Bridget Caswell

Out in space, after undocking from the International Space Station, the fourth Spacecraft Fire Experiment (Saffire) was successfully completed, helping us understand the behavior of fire in different space environments.

During the Saffire IV experiment, researchers burned a sample of SIBAL cloth, a composite of 75% cotton and 25% fiberglass. As the flame spreads shortly after ignition, you can see bright speckles behind, which are glowing char on the cloth. Credits: NASA

Earlier this year, NASA’s eCryo project team evaluated a series of technologies aimed at reducing propellant losses in space for human exploration missions. To test some of these new technologies, the team built a large cryogenic propellant tank called SHIIVER (Structural Heat Intercept, Insulation and Vibration Evaluation Rig) to insulate and protect the fuel when in space.

The SHIIVER tank sits inside the In-Space Propulsion Facility’s vacuum chamber at NASA’s Plum Brook Station.
The SHIIVER tank sits inside the In-Space Propulsion Facility’s vacuum chamber at NASA’s Plum Brook Station. The tank was subjected to the extreme temperatures of space to ensure the new technologies on SHIIVER kept the propellants inside cold and in a liquid state.
Credits: NASA

The dedicated team at our Space Environments Complex completed a far-reaching series of tests on the Orion spacecraft.  The vehicle will travel to the Moon and back during the first Artemis mission scheduled for late 2021.

One year ago today, NASA’s Orion Spacecraft arrived in Ohio and began a journey to our Plum Brook Station facility in Sandusky, Ohio. There, the vehicle was put through a series of tests to ensure it’s ready to fly for the Artemis I mission to the Moon and back. Credits: NASA

And finally, we are incredibly proud of this year’s class of interns, who were the first to serve entirely online.  Their ability to adapt to an internship very different than what they expected was very impressive.

College student is pictured working at a computer in his high-rise apartment.
Intern Carnell W. Bolden works virtually from his desk in Arlington, Virginia.
Credits: NASA

As we approach 2021, we remain committed to move our research forward for the benefit of humanity.

Nancy Smith Kilkenny
NASA Glenn Research Center