Spinel - Electro-optical Windows and Lenses

Technology Assessment & Transfer develops and sells Spinel windows and lenses to meet the demands of the electro-optic customers in the defense, space and research communities.  Electro-optical windows have been manufactured, tested, demonstrated and sampled on various platforms for the Air Force, Navy, MDA and in the private sector.

 

Research use of a Spinel window to view a spark plug under ignition in the visible to IR range (Photo courtesy of Apogee Scientific)

 

Manufacturing techniques are optimized for electro-optic applications to produce high quality material with excellent homogeneity and an eye on affordability.  Windows can routinely be manufactured over a large range of sizes to near net shape specifications.

 

Benefits of Spinel Electro-optic Windows and Lenses

  • Excellent transmission in the UV through mid-wave IR wavelengths.
  • Superior refractive index stability with respect to temperature from aerodynamic heating
  • High hardness provides increased resistance to environmental abrasion and impact
  • Reduced required thicknesses increases transmission
  • Cubic crystalline structure is very stable in virtually all environments

 

Currently TA&T is developing a very large area window for the Navy’s DDG 1000 class destroyer.  This application requires a large EO window, 19” x 27” with very high quality optical characteristics and high strength.  A TA&T Spinel window has also been successfully demonstrated on an ATFLIR reconnaissance pod mounted on a Navy F/A 18 during training.  These are just a few of the applications taking advantage of the many benefits provided by Spinel.  The flexibility of design combined with affordable manufacturing techniques for TA&T Spinel allows greater freedom for EO system designers.

Ta&T news

TA&T Ceramic Stereolithographically Produced Parts Integral to Instrument Package on NASA Mars Science Laboratory’s Curiosity Rover

Annapolis, MD – November 29, 2011 – Ceramic Stereolithography (CSL), a unique manufacturing process developed by Technology Assessment and Transfer, Inc. (TA&T) under multiple SBIR and internally funded programs, was used to make ceramic heater bodies that are onboard the recently launched Mars rover named Curiosity.


Contracted by the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, TA&T fabricated alumina pyrolysis oven housings that are being used in the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) suite of instruments. Patrick Jordan, a NASA engineer, explained that due to the complex nature of the housing, traditional machining of the ceramic was too expensive to undertake. The major impediment to machining the housing is a series of 52 closely spaced, small diameter (.012”) holes through which heating elements are placed. Impressively, the CSL process was able to create fully functional prototypes that survived the rapid heating to >1,000°C. The parts passed thermal shock and thermal cycle durability testing, and will be used on Mars to heat soil samples to determine the presence of water and organic compounds that indicate the possibility of life on Mars.


The CSL process has applications beyond space exploration, including those which have consumer and industrial applications. The process requires no tooling and therefore allows rapid prototyping of fully-functional ceramic parts. TA&T has been involved in the development of rocket engine fuel injectors, heat exchangers for cooling electronics in hybrid electric vehicles, ceramic molds for turbine engine blades, and electrosurgical medical device tips, among other development projects.


Photographs of the TA&T produced ceramic heater housing for the Mars Science Laboratory can be found in the Ceramic Stereolithography gallery.

 

Additional information about the Mars Science Laboratory mission can be found at http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/index.html.

 

TA&T Completes Air Force SBIR Phase II Kickoff Meetings

Annapolis, MD – November 21, 2011 – Technology Assessment & Transfer, Inc. has just completed a kickoff meeting as a prime contractor on an Air Force SBIR Phase II.

 

Led by Dr. James Hom, the Air Force Phase II effort is focused on advanced cooling and packaging designs for electronic components within an aircraft's power electronic converter. The proposed component level solutions substantially reduce the thermal resistances between the highest heat producing components (e.g., the power switching modules, magnetic inductors, and capacitors) and the coolant. These solutions will be integrated into an existing power electronic converter and tested in a simulated aircraft environment. An increase in maximum allowable inlet coolant temperature of at least 30°C is expected.

 

Corporate Headquarters

133 Defense Hwy, Suite 212
Annapolis, MD 21401
Ph: 410.224.3710
Fx: 410.224.4678
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Research & Manufacturing Facilities

Advanced Ceramics & Coatings
Ceramic Microdevices
Thermal Management
1110 Benfield Blvd., Suite Q
Millersville, MD 21108
410-987-3435
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Spinel & Optical Ceramics
215 Najoles Road
Millersville, MD 21108
410-987-1656
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Dr. Larry Fehrenbacher, President
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Sharon Fehrenbacher, CEO
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