Shuttle Coating More Than Applies
DOW CORNING AND
KENNEDY SPACE Center are continuing to test and refine a material
that has brought significant savings to NASA launch pad coating
efforts and is already used commercially in the aerospace and automotive
industries. The Dow Corning® 3-6376 Fast Cure Elastomer,
a two-part, primerless, 100-percent silicone material, is used in
the automotive industry as a sealant and to coat engine compartment
firewalls, according to Dow Corning spokesman John Torgerson.
The Dow Corning® 3-6376 Fast Cure Elastomer benefits
NASA and private industry in several ways. It saves NASA money on
materials, equipment and labor. It also reduces turnaround time
for the launch structure because of fewer refurbishment operations.
The new coating technology allows for easy spray application of
large areas, and fewer solvents are used to help protect the delicate
environment surrounding the launch pad. The product provides stronger
protective coating to protect the Space Shuttle's Mobile Launcher
Platform, the gantry structure and other valuable equipment from
the rocket's heat, abrasives and chemical exposure.
Kennedy has been working on better protective coatings and easier,
environmentally friendly applications since the 1980s, according
to Kennedy's Materials Science Laboratory spokesman Lou MacDowell.
NASA decided to investigate using more resistant ablative-type coatings
to reduce the costly recoating of highly exposed sections of the
launch pad, damaged from heat, abrasion and chemical exposure after
each launch.
Ablative-type coatings form tough, abrasion-resistant surface
films and also resist intense heat. MacDowell said that Kennedy's
Materials Science Laboratory tested and evaluated many formulas
of silicone ablative materials. A primerless, spray-on formula was
of particular interest to replace the trowel-applied silicone that
required separate primer steps.
Finally, in 1994, with NASA's recommendations and testing, Dow
Corning's Fast Cure Elastomer was formulated. The new product, applied
with special spraying equipment and techniques, has withstood more
than a dozen launches to date without the need for recoating.
For more information, contact Tom Gould at Kennedy Space Center.
Call: 407/867-6238, Fax: 407/867-2050, E-mail: Thomas.Gould-1@kmail.ksc.nasa.gov
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Ablative-type
coatings that protect the Space Shuttle and reduce recoating costs
have found commercial applications in the automotive and aerospace
industries.
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TELEMEDICINE
COLLABORATIONS AND EFFORTS CONTINUE
NASA
is working closely with Yale University to explore potential
collaborations with French organizations in the field of telemedicine,
for commercial and space applications of next-generation technologies.
NASA and Yale most recently tested new health care devices
based on space science technology by analyzing data from sensors
monitoring the vital signs and location of four climbers making
their ascent on Mt. Everest. Health data traveled from the
base camp at an altitude of 17,500 feet to the NASA-Yale Telemedicine
Project site at Yale, where Yale medical personnel monitored
the health status of the climbers.
Tests
on Mt. Everest may lead to design improvements in future automated
medical monitoring and care systems for astronauts who may
be in space for months. The problems of high-altitude adaptation,
physiological stress and the climbers' location represent
great medical challenges similar to those experienced by an
astronaut in space.
NASA
and Yale have been working in partnership since July 1997
to contribute to the nation's competitive lead in the commercial
applications of telemedicine. In Toulouse, France, both the
Institute of Telemedicine and the Institut de Médecine
et de Physiologie Spatiale (MEDES) have agreed to explore
potential collaborations in the telemedicine field with NASA's
Commercial Space Center, Medical Informatics and Technology
Applications (MITA), at the Yale University School of Medicine.
Cooperation between NASA's National Space Biomedical Research
Institute and MEDES also is being explored.
In 1997,
NASA's Office of Life and Microgravity Sciences and Applications
established a Commercial Space Center--MITA--at the Yale University
School of Medicine. This center is focused on activities in
telemedicine and technology applied to the delivery of health
care.
For more
information, contact Debra J. Rahn at NASA Headquarters.
Call: 202/358-1638, E-mail: debra.rahn@hq.nasa.gov
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