Deliverables:

Notes from IEEE:

- change in temperature less than 2K across tank [nearly isothermic] 

-24 hour turnover rate of fluid from cryogenic pump

Would a moving sensor affect the thermodynamics/temperature of the liquid?

Look into: 

1. Tank wall thermocouples

Where: Directly on the metal surface of the cryogenic tank itself, under the MLI, touching the tank’s skin.
How many: Often 8–20, spaced around the circumference and length (top, mid, bottom).
Purpose: Detect hot spots, cold spots, and how evenly the tank is cooled.

Think: small metal dots glued right onto the tank’s external shell.


2. Cooling-loop inlet thermocouple

Where: On the tube that carries cold refrigerant into the BAC loop, right before it touches the tank.
Purpose: Measures the temperature of the coolant before it absorbs heat from the tank.

This is the “entry temperature” of the cooling system.


3. Cooling-loop outlet thermocouple

Where: On the tube where the refrigerant exits the BAC loop, right after it has passed along the tank’s surface.
Purpose: Shows how much warmer the coolant got after absorbing heat.

This is the “exit temperature.”

Inlet vs outlet difference = actual heat absorbed from the tank.


4. MLI outer-surface thermocouples

Where: On the outermost layer of the insulation blanket that wraps the tank, fully outside the MLI stack.
Purpose: Shows how hot the outside of the insulation gets from chamber radiation and heaters.

These sit on top of the MLI, not touching metal.


5. Heater / IR panel thermocouples

Where: Stuck directly on the surface of the heater panels or IR lamp housings that are pointed at the tank.
Purpose: Monitor the temperature of the “fake Sun” to confirm your heat input is stable and known.

Tests our sensor setups have to perform in:


Thermal Subsystem Demo: 

Testing whether a cryogenic tank wrapped in insulation and cooled by a cryocooler can keep its liquid from boiling away in a space-like vacuum environment.

How-to-test:

Sensor recommendations:

Mixing Subsystem Demo - Testing that the pump can mix cold fluids with induced heat stratification in low gravity environments. Flight test on parabolic arc with 20 second periods of microgravity, or ground test by spinning the tank to create and artificial gravity and then stopping the tank suddenly.

Baffle and Pump Cryogenic Flow Test - Testing that the pump and baffle system can mix stratified fluid to make it homogenous. Test using liquid nitrogen or oxygen that is allowed to sit(causing the top to warm and create heat stratification), then turn on the pump(and spin the cylinder on a turntable if possible) to measure the temperature equalization.

Thermal Vacuum Test:

Testing the thermal emissivity (tendency to lose heat energy) and outgassing (escape of boil off through the tank walls in a vacuum environment).

How-to-test:

Cryocooler Performance Test: Benchmarking the efficiency and endurance of a cooling system at different thermal loads in a a thermal-vacuum chamber. Run neon through a representative tube loop (simulated piping system) to confirm it works.