Quantitech gas analyser tests satellite launch system

Published: 7-Nov-2012

DX4030 chosen because of its ability to provide highly accurate results for almost any gas

Astrium, Europe’s leading space technology company, has used a portable FTIR gas analyser as part of a test programme for satellite launch systems. UK instrumentation specialist Quantitech supplied the Gasmet DX4030 analyser.

Greg Richardson, Astrium’s Propulsion Test & Launch Services Manager, says: “The DX4030 was chosen because of its ability to provide highly accurate results for almost any gas. However, its intuitive software, compact size and portability were significant considerations because we use the technology at a number of our locations around the world.”

One of the tests performed on the propulsion systems is checking the integrity of the chambers that contain rocket fuel. To achieve this, the tanks are filled with a simulant (often isopropyl alcohol and demineralised water) and exposed to launch simulation conditions, such as pressure, heat and vibration, etc. The simulant is then removed and the DX4030 used to check for contamination or leaks.

The DX4030 employs FTIR gas detection technology to obtain infrared spectra by first collecting an ‘interferogram’ of a sample signal with an interferometer, which measures all infrared frequencies simultaneously to produce a spectrum. This means that data is collected for the required parameters in addition to spectra for almost all others.

Sample identification is possible because chemical functional groups absorb light at specific frequencies. As a result, the DX4030 can measure any gas, with the exception of noble (or inert) gases, homonuclear diatomic gases and H2S (the detection limit is too high).

Quantitech's Dr Andrew Hobson says: “This has to be one of the more unusual applications for the DX4030. It is more commonly used for chemical spill, security and forensic investigations, and for occupational health, anaesthetic gas monitoring and research. The same technology is also employed to monitor industrial processes and gaseous emissions. However, Astrium's work clearly demonstrates the flexibility of the device and we are delighted to have been involved.”

The DX4030 was first used in the testing of the LISA Pathfinder, a project for which Astrium was selected by the European Space Agency to build and launch a spacecraft.

This spacecraft will be packed with radical instrumentation and technology to pave the way for LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna), the world's first space-based gravity wave detector that will measure gravitational waves generated by exotic objects such as collapsing binary star systems and massive black holes. In doing so, this project will be able to test a phenomenon predicted by Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity in 1916.

The analyser has also been used in testing the Gaia satellite, which will conduct a census of a thousand million stars in our Galaxy, monitoring each of its target stars about 70 times over a five-year period. Gaia will precisely chart their positions, distances, movements, and changes in brightness. It is expected to discover hundreds of thousands of new celestial objects, such as extra-solar planets and failed stars called brown dwarfs. Gaia should also observe hundreds of thousands of asteroids within our own solar system.

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