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TEMPUS
Everything floats in weightlessness, but making things float where you
want them to float is a challenge. Germany is meeting that with TEMPUS, an electromagnetic levitation
furnace that will melt samples without them touching the walls, thus rendering
nearly perfect samples.
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Large
Isothermal Furnace
The Large
Isothermal Furnace developed by Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries
Co., Ltd., for the National Space Development Agency of Japan (NASDA). Japan's
National Space Development Agency will be making its third flight in space.
LIF heats and cools an entire sample, hence the name iso (same) thermal
(temperature). Six experiments are to be conducted using the LIF. They are:
- Liquid Phase Sintering
(LPS-2) :This process is used by industry to form very hard, dense
solids, which are used in anything from cutting tools, to car transmission
gears to radiation shields! The materials are made by fusing (sintering)
metal or ceramic powders. Liquid phase sintering uses a special liquid,
made from the material itself, to suspend the powders for fusing. However,
gravity affects the dispersal of the powders suspended in the liquid, and
causes the resulting solid to be less uniform. This experiment is designed
to better understand this process and develop techniques that can be used
to lower costs of production, and create even better solids using LPS.
The history of physics has been marked by measurements of constants,
numbers - like the speed of light in a vacuum or the value of pi - that
anchor equations so we can get useful answers from other values that vary.
Despite centuries of experience in mixing, molding, and casting metals,
we still don't have several constants - called diffusion coefficients -
for mixing certian sets of metals. In samples large enough to measure the
diffusion, gravity can disturb the answer the results. Five LIF experiments
will pursue these constants:
- Measurement
of Diffusion Coefficient by Shear Cell Method will test a new approach
to measuring how fast metals diffuse into each other (much like a scent
traveling from one end of a room to another). The shear cell does just
what its name suggests: after the experiment has run a set period of time,
the sample cartridge is rotated so a portion is sheared away from the main
body, thus preventing further diffusion as the sample is cooled.
- Diffusion
of Liquid Metals and Alloys will look at how metals of almost the
same atomic mass - two isotopes of tin - diffuse into each other.
- Diffusion
in Liquid Lead-Tin-Telluride, a potential material for infrared
detectors, to measure its dependence on temperature,
- Impurity
Diffusion in Ionic Melts will electrolyze salts of potassium chloride
and lithium chloride in somewhat the same manner as basic chemistry experiments
that electrolyze water.
- Diffusion
Processed in Molten Semiconductors (DPIMS) also uses shear cells
that rotate samples into position to face each other so diffusive mixing
can start, then apart to end the process. Samples on one side contain pure
germanium; those on the other side have germanium with traces (doping)
of gallium, silicon, and arsenic. Measuring the samples after the mission
will help us understand how materials mix as solid-state electronics are
built up.
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Coarsening
in Solid-Liquid Mixtures (CSLM)
Coarsening is a process that can severely degrade the strength
of an alloy-product such as a turbine blade in an aircraft engine. When
you make an alloy, consisting of two or more different metals, as the alloy
cools, the two metals generally have different freezing points. One metal
can begin to solidify before the other. In the cooling process, the first
metal to solidify can begin as very small particles, but coarsen, or
grow into fewer larger particles before the second metal in the alloy cools.
Alloys with a few larger particles tend to be weaker than alloys with many
small particles. The pictures at left show coarsening over a four hour period
for a laboratory sample.
The speed and mechanisms of coarsening are not well understood. Furthermore,
in 1-g, the heavier metal can sink to the bottom, further confusing the
ability to study the process. Scientists
at Lewis Research Center will be studing this phenomenon during the
MSL-1 mission.
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