The present invention relates in general to space-deployable structures, and is particularly directed to a lightweight truss structure which accommodates the side mounting of components in its deployed configuration, and which folds to a highly nested, compact stacked configuration when stowed.
In order to transport and space-deploy large physical structures, such as antennas, solar reflectors and the like, using cost effective (small) launch vehicles, it is necessary that the underlying support architecture for the deployed structure be lightweight and compactly stowable in as small a payload volume as possible. Many of the space deployment architectures that have been proposed to date employ a relatively long (on the order of three hundred meters or more) rectilinear boom, that provides for the mounting of a variety of devices along its length. Moreover, many applications which use a boom require the boom to be extremely lightweight and have a high degree of stiffness or rigidity. This is particularly true in the case of large antennas, which need to be precisely deployed and must maintain geometry precision on orbit. For such applications it is also necessary that the deployment of the boom be rate and geometry controlled.
Unfortunately, the relatively large, high stiffness booms that have been proposed and deployed to date typically use canister mechanisms for their deployment that are relatively heavy and do not allow side mounting of payloads along the entire length of the structure. Telescoping booms are an alternative, yet like canister deployed structures, they have no side mounting capability. Inflatable structures, on the other hand, provide for highly compact stowage; however, once deployed they are subject to micro-meteoroid damage; they also lack geometric precision due to the fact that they have a relatively high coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE). To address the deployed geometry precision problem, rigidized inflatables have been suggested. However, these structures suffer from fiber breakage, a lack of deployment repeatability and final material characteristic consistency.
In accordance with the present invention, shortcomings of conventional space-deployable boom structures, such as those described above, are effectively obviated by means of a collapsible truss structure, that is rectilinearly deployable from a tightly nested, stowed configuration to an elongated truss configuration. As will be described, the truss structure of the present invention contains a plurality of foldable, truss-forming multi-sided bays. Each bay contains a pair of multi-sided (e.g., triangular) battens that are joined together at corner regions thereof by foldable longerons.
In addition, each side of a bay contains a plurality of flexible cord diagonal members that cross one another and connected to diagonally opposed corner regions of that side. When the longerons are in their folded positions, the battens are nested together against one another in a stacked arrangement and the flexible cord diagonal members flex into a compact stowed configuration between adjacent battens.
Each corner region of a batten includes a pair of flexible clamps that are configured to engage an elongated support member in the stowed configuration of the bay containing that batten. In the course of deployment of the bay outwardly from its stowed configuration, the clamps travel along and leave the elongated support member, and engage threads of an elevator screw that is coaxial with and extends outwardly from said elongated support member.
The elevator screw is coaxial with an elongated lead screw, which passes through said elongated support member, such that rotation of said elongated lead screw initially causes linear travel of the elevator screw over a prescribed distance, sufficient to deploy the outermost bay of the truss. The elevator screw then becomes fixedly engaged with or slaved to the lead screw. Once this occurs, further rotation of the lead screw causes rotation of the elevator screw therewith. The clamps travel along the elevator screw until they leave the elevator screw in the course of deployment of a respective bay of the truss structure. Just prior to a batten frame leaving the elevator screw the next batten of the folded truss structure is pulled onto and engaged with the elevator screw.
Rotation of the lead screws are controlled by a single drive motor. The output shaft of the drive motor is coupled to a gearing and interconnect arrangement that is coupled to each of the lead screws and is retained by a baseplate from which the elongated tubular support members extend. Operation of the motor drives the gearing and interconnect arrangement, so as to cause synchronized rotation of each of the lead screws and the elevator screws engaged thereby, thereby sequentially deploying successively adjacent bays of the truss structure.
Prior to deployment of the truss structure the folded assembly is stored by a compressive load from a tensioned cable seating each batten to the adjacent battens at the cup cones. This load allows the stowed truss system to tolerate and transfer inertial loads generated by its own mass and those of payloads attached to each bay to its mounting point at its base. This capability allows the deployment device to be sized for only its deployment functions and not to tolerate the loads of the truss under dynamic loads.
Attention is initially directed to
Triangular batten 10 is formed of three sides F1, F2 and F3, while triangular batten 11 is formed of three sides F4, F5 and F6. In accordance with a preferred embodiment, each of the sides of a respective batten has the same length, so that the geometry of a respective batten is essentially that of an equilateral triangle. Battens 10 and 11 are connected with one another by three parallel and foldable/hinged tubular or hollow rod-shaped longerons L1, L2 and L3, that connect like corners regions of the battens with one another. In particular, longeron L1 connects corner C13 formed at the intersection of sides F1 and F3 of batten 10 with corner C46 formed at the intersection of sides F4 and F6 of batten 11. Longeron L2 connects corner C12 formed at the intersection of sides F1 and F2 of batten 10 with corner C45 formed at the intersection of sides F4 and F5 of batten 11. Likewise, longeron L3 connects corner C23 formed at the intersection of sides F2 and F3 of batten 10 with corner C56 formed at the intersection of sides F5 and F6 of batten 11. Like battens 10 and 11, the longerons are preferably made of graphite composite material. In addition, the longerons are hinged at their midpoints to facilitate stowage and deployment as will be described.
Also shown in
In particular, a diagonal D1 connects corner C13 of batten 10 with diagonally opposite corner C45 of batten 11; while diagonal D2, which crosses diagonal D1, connects corner C12 of batten 10 with corner C46 of batten 11. Similarly, diagonal D3 connects corner C23 of batten 10 with diagonally opposite corner C46 of batten 11; and diagonal D4, which crosses diagonal D3, connects corner C13 of batten 10 with corner C56 of batten 11. Likewise, diagonal D5 connects corner C23 of batten 10 with diagonally opposite corner C45 of batten 11; and diagonal D6, which crosses diagonal D5, connects corner C12 of batten 10 with corner C56 of batten 11.
As described earlier, and as shown generally at 21–26 in
Disposed adjacent to the C-clamps are respective tubular shaped stand-offs 35 and 45. As shown in the partial side view of
In order to connect the hinged longerons and the flexible diagonals to the battens, a respective corner region of a batten has a generally elongated slot, shown at 37 in
As further shown in
As pointed out briefly above, deployment of a respective batten is accomplished by means of an elevator screw that becomes engaged by the pairs of C-clamps at the distal ends of the corner regions of the batten. As shown in
The nut 62 has a radial bore 64 that contains a spring-loaded pin 65. This pin is sized to engage an associated detent in the lead screw 110, when the elevator screw has been translated to its outermost extension position from the structural tube 50, making the elevator screw solid with, or slaved to, the lead screw at this point in the travel of the elevator screw. This outermost extension position of the elevator screw 60 is slightly longer than the length of a respective truss bay, so that a bay may acquire its deployed configuration as its two end battens engage the elevator screw. Once the elevator screw 60 becomes slaved to the lead screw 110, rotation of the elevator screw 60 will cause an associated rotation of the elevator screw. This, in turn, will cause outward translation of a batten, whose C-clamps engage the elevator screw.
As shown in
The manner in which the truss structure of the invention is deployed from its stowed configuration is diagrammatically illustrated in
Operation of the drive motor 120 causes its drive shaft and associated gear arrangements 140, 150 and 160 described above to rotate the drive shafts/lead screws 145, 155 and 165. As the lead screws are rotated by the operation of the motor 120, their associated elevator screws 60 are translated axially outwardly away from the stowed set of battens, thereby translating the outermost batten B1 away from the stowed stack, causing partial deployment of the first truss bay, as shown in
Eventually, as shown in
Next, as shown in
With further rotation of the elevator screws, the second bay becomes fully deployed, and the third bay will begin to deploy. Next, the batten B2 that interconnects the first and second bays will axially depart from the distal ends of the elevator screws, in the same manner as the outermost batten B1, as described above, and the above sequence of events will continue until all of the bays have been fully deployed.
While we have shown and described an embodiment in accordance with the present invention, it is to be understood that the same is not limited thereto but is susceptible to numerous changes and modifications as known to a person skilled in the art, and we therefore do not wish to be limited to the details shown and described herein, but intend to cover all such changes and modifications as are obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050206579 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |