SBIR-STTR Award

Ultra-Stable ALLVAR Alloy Strut Development for Space Telescopes
Award last edited on: 1/20/2024

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NASA : MSFC
Total Award Amount
$874,969
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
S2.03
Principal Investigator
James Monroe

Company Information

Thermal Expansion Solutions LLC

501 Graham Road
College Station, TX 77845
   (956) 789-3723
   N/A
   www.allvaralloys.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 17
County: Brazos

Phase I

Contract Number: 80NSSC18P2061
Start Date: 7/27/2018    Completed: 2/15/2019
Phase I year
2018
Phase I Amount
$124,993
This NASA SBIR Phase I proposal is in response to the need for Ultra-Stable Telescope Structures and is designed to evaluate ALLVAR Alloys for their potential as metering and support structures for optics that are critical to NASA’s future missions. Telescopes used for astrophysics, exoplanet, and planetary studies require picometer stability over several minutes to hours. Building large support structures with picometer level stability is a challenge with currently available materials due to their brittle nature in the case of Zerodur and ULE or their requirement to have tight thermal control in the case of SiC or carbon fiber composites. ALLVAR Alloys offer a new material solution for thermally stable structures. They exhibit negative thermal expansion and can compensate for the positive thermal expansion of other materials to stabilize a telescope. The ultimate goal of this work is to create an ultra-stable ALLVAR Alloy metering structure manufacturing process. Bars with low thermal expansion have previously been made by welding ALLVAR Alloys to commercially available Titanium alloys, but their dimensional stability over thermal fluctuations is above the pm stability limit. This Phase I project is designed to better understand the individual stability of the titanium and ALLVAR Alloys and to evaluate hydroxide bonding for mounting mirrors to ALLVAR in preparation for pm level stability tests. The Phase II project would run full scale pm level stability tests in an effort to evaluate the relaxation manufacturing steps and understand how welding the ALLVAR Alloy to titanium may affect the material’s stability. Potential NASA Applications A new material with picometer stability can potentially improve support structures for optic systems critical to NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, like LUVIOR or HabEX. There are other potential opportunities in the manufacture of ultra-stable coronograph hardware, support structures for deformable mirrors, telescope steering, and star tracker markets. ALLVAR metals can also be used to make balloon telescopes for exoplanet discovery and cryogenic far infrared telescopes. Potential Non-NASA Applications ALLVAR’s unique negative thermal expansion properties can compensate for thermal focus shift in refractive infrared optics used for nightvision, UVAs, missiles, and sub-sea applications. This allow infrared optics manufacturers to reduce the size and weight of their optics. ALLVAR Alloy’s unique properties are also starting to get the attention of composite and glass companies. We see potential collaboration with companies in these areas for support hardware and transition piece applications.

Phase II

Contract Number: 80NSSC19C0176
Start Date: 7/15/2019    Completed: 10/14/2020
Phase II year
2019
Phase II Amount
$749,976
This NASA SBIR Phase II proposal is in response to the need for Ultra-Stable Telescope Structures and is designed to evaluate ALLVAR Alloys for their potential as metering and support structures for optics that are critical to NASA’s future missions. Telescopes used for astrophysics, exoplanet, and planetary studies require picometer stability over several minutes to hours. Building large support structures with picometer level stability is a challenge with currently available materials due to their brittle nature in the case of Zerodur and ULE or their requirement to have tight thermal control in the case of SiC or carbon fiber composites. ALLVAR Alloys offer a new material solution for thermally stable structures. They exhibit negative thermal expansion and can compensate for the positive thermal expansion of other materials to stabilize a telescope. Bars with thermal stability approaching Zerodur’s have previously been made by joining ALLVAR Alloys to commercially available Titanium alloys, and the Phase I effort developed stabilization processes for improved dimensional stability. This Phase II project is designed to leverage the Phase I development to create an ultra-stable ALLVAR Alloy hexapod structure and compare its performance to Invar, a commonly used low CTE material. The Phase II project would run full scale pm level stability tests of both assemblies in an effort to quantify the ALLVAR Alloy’s performance as an ultra-stable strut. Potential NASA Applications (Limit 1500 characters, approximately 150 words) A new material with picometer stability can potentially improve support structures for optic systems critical to NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, like LUVIOR, LISA, or HabEX. There are other potential opportunities in the manufacture of ultra-stable coronograph hardware, support structures for deformable mirrors, telescope steering, and star tracker markets. ALLVAR metals can also be used to make balloon telescopes for exoplanet discovery and cryogenic far infrared telescopes. Potential Non-NASA Applications (Limit 1500 characters, approximately 150 words) ALLVAR Alloy’s unique negative thermal expansion properties can compensate for thermal focus shift in refractive infrared optics allowing infrared optics manufacturers to reduce the size and weight of their optics. ALLVAR Alloy’s unique properties are also getting attention for making washers to create constant force fasteners.