Status Report

NASA Solicitation: Game Changing Opportunities: Miniaturized Electrospray Propulsion – Smallsat Propulsion System

By SpaceRef Editor
November 7, 2013
Filed under , ,

GAME CHANGING OPPORTUNITIES IN TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT 2012 APPENDIX D TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT FOR MINIATURIZED ELECTROSPRAY PROPULSION SUPPORT OF SMALL SATELLITE PROPULSION SYSTEM

Award – Nov 06, 2013

General Information

  NAIS Posted Date: Nov 06, 2013

  FedBizOpps Posted Date: Nov 06, 2013

  Noncompetitive Action: No

  Recovery and Reinvestment Act Action: No

  Contract Award Date: Sep 27, 2013

  Contract Award Number: NNL13AA12C

  Solicitation Number: NNL12A3001N-001

  Contract Award Amount: 1458160.00

  Contract Line Item Number: 001 and 002

  Contractor: Massachusetts Institute of Technology,77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139-4307

  Contractor DUNS Number: 001425594

  Classification Code: A — Research and Development

  NAICS Code: 541712 – Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences (except Biotechnology)

Contracting Office Address

NASA/Langley Research Center, Mail Stop 12, Industry Assistance Office, Hampton, VA 23681-0001

Description

The scope of this requirement is for the advance development for an Electric Propulsion (EP)System, which is recognized as an efficient means of providing thrust to spacecraft. Recent technical advances have made EP systems a common mode for orbit maintenance and spacecraft attitude control for larger spacecraft. Successes in orbit-raising have encouraged NASA mission designers to consider high power Solar Electric Propulsion (SEP) technology mature enough to design long distance human exploration missions predicated on its use. While these technology developments have been occurring at the macro scale thruster level, advances have also been made with thruster technology on a much smaller scale.

It is envisioned that EP based micro-thrusters can be used for small satellite propulsion, as well as fine attitude control for large satellites that require extreme pointing control such as space telescopes. One class of micro-thrusters, electrospray micro thrusters, seems particularly promising in meeting the needs for both small spacecraft propulsion and fine attitude control of large spacecraft. Furthermore, scaled up versions of electrospray micro-thrusters may one day be able to provide thrust equivalent to the Hall and Ion EP technologies now in use.

Fully developed, electrospray micro-thruster technologies have the potential to result in a complete re-design of the power and propulsion requirements for a SEP class mission. The need for these micro thruster technologies has been captured within the relevant NASA Space Technology Roadmap (TA-02: In-Space Propulsion Technologies) and general EP technologies were called out in the recent National Research Council recommendations to NASA.

 

Point of Contact

  Name: David O Garner

  Title: Contract Specialist/Contracting Officer

  Phone: 757-864-2784  Fax: 757-864-7898  Email: David.O.Garner@nasa.gov 

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SpaceRef staff editor.