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Description
This research focuses mainly on employing tunable materials to achieve dynamic radiative properties for spacecraft and building thermal management. A secondary objective is to investigate tunable materials for optical propulsion applications. The primary material investigated is vanadium dioxide (VO2), which is a thermochromic material with an insulator-to-metal phase transition. VO2

This research focuses mainly on employing tunable materials to achieve dynamic radiative properties for spacecraft and building thermal management. A secondary objective is to investigate tunable materials for optical propulsion applications. The primary material investigated is vanadium dioxide (VO2), which is a thermochromic material with an insulator-to-metal phase transition. VO2 typically undergoes a dramatic shift in optical properties at T = 341 K, which can be reduced through a variety of techniques to a temperature more suitable for thermal control applications. A VO2-based Fabry-Perot variable emitter is designed, fabricated, characterized, and experimentally demonstrated. The designed emitter has high emissivity when the radiating surface temperature is above 345 K and low emissivity when the temperature is less than 341 K. A uniaxial transfer matrix method and Bruggeman effective medium theory are both introduced to model the anisotropic properties of the VO2 to facilitate the design of multilayer VO2-based devices. A new furnace oxidation process is developed for fabricating high quality VO2 and the resulting thin films undergo comprehensive material and optical characterizations. The corresponding measurement platform is developed to measure the temperature-dependent transmittance and reflectance of the fabricated Fabry-Perot samples. The variable heat rejection of the fabricated samples is demonstrated via bell jar and cryothermal vacuum calorimetry measurements. Thermal modeling of a spacecraft equipped with variable emittance radiators is also conducted to elucidate the requirements and the impact for thermochromic variable emittance technology.
The potential of VO2 to be used as an optical force modulating device is also investigated for spacecraft micropropulsion. The preliminary design considers a Fabry-Perot cavity with an anti-reflection coating which switches between an absorptive “off” state (for insulating VO2) and a reflective “on” state (for metallic VO2), thereby modulating the incident solar radiation pressure. The visible and near-infrared optical properties of the fabricated vanadium dioxide are examined to determine if there is a sufficient optical property shift in those regimes for a tunable device.
ContributorsTaylor, Sydney June (Author) / Wang, Liping (Thesis advisor) / Wells, Valana (Committee member) / Yu, Hongbin (Committee member) / Wang, Robert (Committee member) / Thangavelautham, Jekanthan (Committee member) / Massina, Christopher J (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
The study of soft magnetic materials has been growing in popularity in recent years. Driving this interest are new applications for traditional electrical power-management components, such as inductors and transformers, which must be scaled down to the micro and nano scale while the frequencies of operation have been scaling u

The study of soft magnetic materials has been growing in popularity in recent years. Driving this interest are new applications for traditional electrical power-management components, such as inductors and transformers, which must be scaled down to the micro and nano scale while the frequencies of operation have been scaling up to the gigahertz range and beyond. The exceptional magnetic properties of the materials make them highly effective in these small-component applications, but the ability of these materials to provide highly-effective shielding has not been so thoroughly considered. Most shielding is done with traditional metals, such as aluminum, because of the relatively low cost of the material and high workability in shaping the material to meet size and dimensional requirements.

This research project focuses on analyzing the variance in shielding effectiveness and electromagnetic field effects of a thin film of Cobalt Zirconium Tantalum Boron (CZTB) in the band of frequencies most likely to require innovative solutions to long-standing problems of noise and interference. The measurements include Near H-Field attenuation and field effects, Far Field shielding, and Backscatter. Minor variances in the thickness and layering of sputter deposition can have significant changes electromagnetic signature of devices which radiate energy through the material.

The material properties presented in this research are H-Field attenuation, H-Field Flux Orientation, Far-Field Approximation, E Field Vector Directivity, H Field Vector Directivity, and Backscatter Magnitude. The results are presented, analyzed and explained using characterization techniques. Future work includes the effect of sputter deposition orientation, application to devices, and applicability in mitigating specific noise signals beyond the 5G band.
ContributorsMiller, Phillip Carl (Author) / Yu, Hongbin (Thesis advisor) / Aberle, James T., 1961- (Committee member) / Blain Christen, Jennifer (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019