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Superlightweight Aerospace Composites

NASA uses robots and robotic technology to explore other planets and objects in our solar system, assist astronauts on the Space Station, study the universe, and much more. Right now there are NASA robots are millions of miles away helping us better understand what’s out there.

Learn More about Superlightweight Aerospace Composites

Location

Greenbelt, MD

Founded

May 1, 1959

People

10,000+

Director

Dennis J. Andrucyk

NASA is developing an extremely lightweight material that could replace metals and carbon fiber composites currently used for a range of aerospace structures, such as fuel tanks, habitats and trusses, to enable significant mass savings.

Current lightweight space structures are constructed from aluminum, titanium or carbon fiber reinforced polymer composites. The Super lightweight Aerospace Composites (SAC) project is scaling up the production of a high-strength, lightweight carbon nanotube yarn strong enough to be used in place of a variety of metallic and other, heavier, materials that make up space structures.

Carbon nanotubes consist of carbon atoms chemically bound in the shape of cylinders that are less than 1/80,000 the diameter of human hair. At that scale, carbon nanotubes are about 100 times stronger than steel and about eight times lighter. Engineers estimate the high-strength yarn could result in a 25 percent mass savings when replacing carbon fiber reinforced polymers and up to a 50 percent mass savings when replacing aluminum.

The SAC project, based out of NASA’s Langley Research Center, in Hampton, Virginia, aims to enable significant mass savings on space structures. One example is composite propellant tanks  for nuclear thermal propulsion systems. The SAC team is working on the capability to produce high-volume amounts of high-strength yarn.

The project is on track to produce composite coupons from the material to validate the project’s manufacturing approach and enable the high-strength yarn to be considered for a variety of applications for future NASA and commercial missions.

Partnership:

Nanocomp Technologies Inc. of Merrimack, New Hampshire, is working to scale up manufacturing and lower production costs of the material.