专利摘要:
The invention relates to a telecommunications satellite (10), of stabilized type on three axes, said satellite comprising a set of dissipative equipment constituting the payload of the satellite, said satellite being of substantially parallelepipedal shape whose panels forming two opposite faces , say East (16) and West (17), support data transmission antennas (19), and the panels forming two other opposite faces, said North (14) and South (15), have on their outer face radiator surfaces intended for cooling the electronic equipment of the satellite. The equipment installed on the North (14) and South (15) panels dissipates a thermal power corresponding to less than 25% of the total dissipated power.
公开号:FR3015956A1
申请号:FR1363690
申请日:2013-12-30
公开日:2015-07-03
发明作者:Raphael Hache;Bruno Trancart;Andrew Walker
申请人:Centre National dEtudes Spatiales CNES;Thales SA;Astrium SAS;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

[0001] The present invention relates to the field of 3-axis stabilized telecommunications satellite architectures. Preamble and Prior Art To cope with the ever-increasing volume of telecommunications in the world, telecommunications satellites are becoming increasingly powerful. Their electronic payload (traveling wave tubes in particular) thus releases a considerable thermal power, about 60% of the electric power of the satellite, that is to say commonly of the order of several kW, and the cooling of this payload becomes more and more difficult to achieve. Another phenomenon is amplifying this problem. Indeed, the number of free positions in geostationary orbit is limited, which forces to design satellites always more powerful to put in position on this orbit, to maximize its use. Various techniques have been considered to solve this power / cooling problem for high power satellites. The gradual rise of the frequency bands used to higher frequencies further increases this problem, due to concomitant losses in the waveguides installed between the payload and the transmitting antennas, which makes it necessary to further increase the electrical power. the payload. The present invention aims to propose a solution to all or part of these problems.
[0002] SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The invention aims for this purpose in a first aspect a telecommunications satellite, stabilized type of three axes, including but not limited to being placed in position in geostationary orbit, said satellite having a telecommunication payload consisting of a set of dissipative equipment, said satellite being of substantially parallelepiped shape whose panels forming two opposite faces, called East and West, support data transmission antennas, and the panels forming two other opposite faces, called North and South, have on their outer surface radiator surfaces for cooling the electronic equipment of the satellite. The payload equipment includes RF active elements such as RF power amplifiers (ATOP and SSPA) their power supplies (EPC), pre-amplifiers and linearizer (CAMP) input multiplexers (IMUX), passive elements, such as OMUX, switches and waveguides and digital electronics (payload processors).
[0003] The satellite also includes other equipment for the platform, which provide support functions (power supply, communication with the ground, attitude control and orbit ...). The invention relates to the arrangement of payload equipment and not those of the platform. Those skilled in the art easily distinguish between platform equipment and payload equipment. In a first aspect of the invention, the satellite is such that the payload equipment installed on the North and South panels dissipate a thermal power corresponding to less than 25% of the total dissipated power. A second aspect of the invention is that the electronic power equipment possibly present on the north and south walls have a dissipation corresponding to less than 25% of the power dissipated by the total electronic equipment of the payload.
[0004] Electronic power equipment means the RF power amplifiers (TWTA or SSPA) and their power supplies (EPC) present in the payload of the telecommunications satellite. In this way, the length of the waveguides to be installed between the electronic power equipment and the sources of the antennas is significantly reduced, the electronic power equipment being able to be arranged in the immediate vicinity of the sources. This is particularly interesting in the case of high frequency bands, typically Ka, Q, V for which the losses in these waveguides become considerable over a length of a few meters. These losses force to further increase the power of the equipment to obtain sufficient transmission power, which, as we have seen, increases the problem of thermal control.
[0005] In the prior art, the solution considered exclusively was the installation of highly dissipative equipment on the North and South panels, in direct contact with these cooling faces, so as to optimize the direct thermal control of electronic power equipment. In this new architecture, on the contrary, priority is given to the efficiency of the payload with respect to thermal control, and, paradoxically, by reducing the length of the waveguides between the payload and the antennas. emission reduces the thermal power lost in these waveguides, which simplifies the thermal control of the assembly for high frequency bands.
[0006] The invention reduces heat dissipation and power consumption while maintaining the same power level at the transmit antennas. Another advantage of this configuration is that the heat distribution between the north and south panels is then naturally, which contributes to improving the cooling of the satellite. According to the first aspect of the invention, more particularly, less than 10% of the total dissipated power is supplied by the equipment installed on the north and south panels. In an even more specific embodiment, no dissipative equipment is installed on the North and South faces. This arrangement allows a clearly facilitated disassembly of North and South faces. In a particular embodiment, the equipment installed on the East and West panels dissipates a thermal power corresponding to more than 75% of the total dissipated power.
[0007] More particularly, the equipment installed on the East and West panels dissipates a thermal power corresponding to more than 90% of the total dissipated power.
[0008] In a particular embodiment, more than 75%, and preferably more than 90% of the total dissipated power is dissipated inside the satellite. The interior of the satellite is the space between the North, South and East, West walls.
[0009] According to the second aspect of the invention, more particularly, less than 10% of the dissipated power of the electronic power equipment is provided by the electronic power equipment installed on the North and South panels. In an even more particular embodiment, no Electronic power equipment is installed on the North and South faces. The following embodiments relate to both aspects of the invention. In a particular embodiment, the satellite is such that at least a portion of the electronic power equipment is installed on the East and West panels, the North and South panels being devoted mainly or exclusively to the cooling of the satellite. In a more particular embodiment, more than half of the surface area of the East and West faces is dedicated to the implantation of electronic power equipment. In a particular embodiment, electronic power equipment is installed on at least one face, and, in a more particular embodiment, on both sides, at least one of the East and West panels. Indeed, the assembly of electronic equipment on panels not dedicated to cooling makes it possible to install equipment on both sides of these panels, which doubles the usable surface for mounting the payload. In the prior art, the area required for the payload implantation, and the area needed to radiate the heat generated to the space, were substantially equivalent. In a particular embodiment, the satellite comprises at least one internal panel parallel to the East and West panels, covering at least one face of the electronic power equipment. The panel can carry on both sides electronic power equipment. The arrangement of the panels carrying the electronic power equipment perpendicularly to the North and South radiative panels makes it possible to consider having several such electronic panels in parallel, these electronic panels being substantially perpendicular to the radiative panels. Thus, an arrangement of "electronic cards" is obtained, similar to that of a computer, the number of cards being arbitrarily chosen according to the specifications of the mission of the satellite. These cards, being connected to the radiative panels by their north and south edges, are connected to these panels by cooling devices, for example of the fluid loop type. In a particular embodiment, the satellite comprises at least one fluid-loop type heat transfer device whose condensers are arranged on at least one of the North and South panels, or in a heat pipe. In this case, the evaporators can be placed directly in contact with the electronic power equipment, at the East and West panels. In a particular embodiment, at least one of the North and South panels is articulated around one of its common edges with East and West panels, the fluid loops or heat pipes having flexible zones in the vicinity of said joint. In another embodiment, at least one of the north or south panels is composed of two half-panels, each articulated around their common edge with the east or west panel, this arrangement allows access to the heart of the satellite very late at the integration process of it before launch, which did not allow the prior art.
[0010] In a particular embodiment, the satellite comprises deployable radiative panels. In this case, these deployable radiative panels are connected by heat transfer devices, for example fluid loop type, equipment installed on the East and West panels. The chosen configuration implies the placing of heat transfer devices between the East and West panels, carrying the dissipative equipment, and the North and South radiative panels. There is therefore no additional complexity in extending the tubes of the fluid loops to connect them to the deployable radiative panels. The invention results in the separation of the zones carrying the dissipative equipment, and the radiative zones to the space, contrary to the prior art, in which these zones were identical.
[0011] This separation makes it possible to size these two zones independently. It is for example possible, in the case of complex payloads with many relatively low dissipation equipment, to use many East-West "cards" carrying electronic equipment, and to use the North and South faces for cooling. . On the contrary, it is also possible, in the case of a limited number of very high power electronic equipment, to use only the external faces of the East and West panels for mounting electronic equipment, and to add panels. radiative deployable to North and South panels to ensure cooling. The invention also relates to a satellite integration method as described above, the method comprising a step of opening one of the North or South panels to access the payload of the satellite. DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES The characteristics and advantages of the invention will be better appreciated thanks to the description which follows, description which sets out the characteristics of the invention through a non-limiting example of application. The description is based on the appended figures which represent: FIGS. 1a and 1b: a schematic representation of a geostationary satellite stabilized on 3 axes, FIG. 2: a representation of the different attitudes of the satellite during its orbit, FIG. schematic of the arrangement of electronic equipment in a satellite in top view, according to an embodiment of the invention, Figure 4: an analogous representation, corresponding to the prior art, Figure 5: a schematic perspective view of the body of the satellite, illustrating the implementation of the cooling loops of the satellite, Figure 6: a schematic representation of the arrangement of electronic equipment in a satellite in top view, in the case of an embodiment comprising several parallel panels door equipment, Figure 7: a schematic perspective view of the satellite body 'in the case of the same variant, Fi FIG. 8: a top view illustrating the arrangement of traveling wave tube radiators, in an alternative embodiment of the invention, FIGS. 9a and 9b: diagrams summarizing Ku-band power losses as the waveguides have a length of 2m or 4m.
[0012] DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ONE EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION The present invention is intended to be used on a satellite of the 3-axis stabilized type, intended, in the present example, to be stationed in geostationary orbit. This is, for example, but not limited to, a telecommunications satellite. As can be seen in FIGS. 1a and 1b, in a purely illustrative and in no way limiting example, it is assumed here that this is a satellite 10 comprising a body 11 of substantially parallelepipedal shape whose faces centers define X, Y, Z axes.
[0013] When the satellite 10 is placed in position in its orbit (see Figure 2) its faces are oriented so that a North-South axis Y is parallel to the axis of rotation of the Earth, an axis X said is West is parallel to the axis of movement of the satellite on care orbit, and a Z axis said Earth-anti-Earth is perpendicular to the other two. The GEO 10 satellite always has the same face towards the Earth, and its North 14 and South 15 faces are the least illuminated by the sun, during the orbit of the satellite around the Earth. In the present example, the satellite 10 considered comprises solar panels 12 attached to these North 14 and South 15 faces, because in this way, these solar panels 12 remain permanently out of the shadow generated by the satellite itself. These North 14 and South 15 faces also usually including radiators (not shown in the figure), thus taking advantage of their low exposure to the sun. The satellite 10 further includes reflectors 13, arranged on the East 16 and West 17 faces, and thus always facing the Earth during the orbit of the satellite 10. These reflectors 13 reflect towards the Earth the signals emitted by sources in the form of horns 19, the signals to be emitted being generated by a set of electronic equipment, in particular traveling wave tubes.
[0014] This general architecture of the satellite 10 is well known to those skilled in the art, and as such comes out of the scope of the invention. It is not described further here. Figure 3 then illustrates, schematically, a case of implementation of the invention. This figure is a view from above (along the Earth-anti-Earth axis), assuming that the panels closing the Earth and anti-Earth faces are removed. The panels forming the North 14 and South 15 faces of the satellite 10 are shown above and below in FIG. 3, and the panels forming the East 16 and West 17 faces of the satellite on the left and right sides of FIG. It also recognizes the reflectors 13 and the horns 19, installed on the east faces 16 and west 17 of the body 12 of the satellite 10. As seen here, in the implementation given here by way of example, the electronic equipment of power 21 are installed on the East and West panels, and on both sides of these panels 16, 17, that is to say both inside the rectangle parallelepiped forming the body 11 of the satellite 10, that outside of it. The electronic equipment 21 installed outside the body of the satellite 10 is protected from radiation by a protective cover 22, for example a multilayer insulator ("Multi Layer Insulation") of a type known per se. The horns 19 are connected to the electronic power equipment 21 by short waveguides 23 because of the proximity of the electronic equipment 22 and the horns 19. The mounting modes of the electronic equipment 22 on the East panels 16 and West 17 are known per se.
[0015] As can be seen by way of comparison in FIG. 4, in the prior art, the electronic equipment 22 was installed on the North 14 and South 15 panels, and connected to the horns 19 by waveguides 23 which are much longer than in the implementation of the invention, as shown in Figure 3. In addition, these electronic equipment 22 were installed only on the inner face of the panels North 14 and South 15, the outer face being used to serve as a radiator to space. FIG. 5 then shows, in perspective view, the North, South, East and West panels of the body 12 of the satellite 10. This figure shows the horns 19, the electronic equipment 22 installed on both sides of the East and West panels. . The figure is given in the nonlimiting case of a cooling of electronic equipment 22 by fluid-loop type cooler. North and South panels here comprise networks 41 of condensation tubes, which meander on the outer faces of these panels North and South, so as to ensure good thermal coupling with these faces. The East and West panels carry, as for them, evaporators 42, arranged on the panels in the vicinity of the electronic equipment 22, or directly to their contact. It should be noted that other cooling systems known to those skilled in the art can also be used, such as for example using a heat pipe cooling device instead of a fluid loop.
[0016] The tubes connecting the evaporators 42 to the network of condensers 41 here comprise flexible zones 43, in the vicinity of the junctions between the East and West panels, on the one hand, and North and South, on the other hand. The North and South panels are here articulated in rotation around an Earth-anti-Earth axis, along a line of contact between these North and South panels and East and West panels. In the present non-limiting example, each North and South panel is formed of two half-panels, each articulated around an East or West panel edge. In this way, the half-panels North (and / or South) can open in the door way to give access to the interior of the body 12 of the satellite 10, before launching. In a first implementation variant, the entire north (or south) panel pivots, which assumes that the fluid loops can be dismounted on one of the sides. In a second variant, the panel opens in two, which supposes that there is no fluid loop circuit passing from one half-panel to the other, in this case the access is done without disassemble loops. In both cases the major interest is the access to the equipment without affecting the electrical connections and especially RF (rigid waveguide) In an alternative embodiment illustrated in FIGS. 6 and 7, the satellite comprises intermediate panels 51, parallel to East and West panels. Each of these intermediate panels supports electronic equipment 22 on one or both sides, depending on the needs of the satellite mission and the space available within the body of the satellite 10. In the present embodiment, each of these intermediate panels 51 also comprises at least one evaporator, connected to a network 41 of condensation tubes on the North and / or South panels. Two intermediate panels have been illustrated here in this example, but the number of these panels may vary according to mission requirements. Likewise, their relative distances are functions of the requirements of the equipment worn and the internal architecture of the satellite 10. The methods of attaching the panels together are of a type known to those skilled in the art and are outside the scope of the present invention. .
[0017] Figure 8 shows an implementation detail of wave tube radiators in the case of installation of electronic equipment 22 on the east and west panels. As seen in this figure, traveling wave tube radiators 61 may be installed along the edges connecting the side panels, so that the traveling wave tubes are implanted on the east or west faces, the radiators as for them, facing North or South.
[0018] FIGS. 9a and 9b show the dissipated powers in the case of a waveguide 2 meters long (FIG. 9a) and 4 meters long (FIG. 9b). The numerical data are cited here as a simple illustrative example, in the case of a Ku-band satellite. As can be seen in FIG. 9a, in the case of a waveguide 2 m long, for a power emitted towards the Earth of 100 Watts, the losses are 82 Watts, with a total power consumption of 182 Watts. watts. On the contrary, in the case of a waveguide of 4 meters in length, the losses are 106 watts, for the same output power of 100 watts. The gain on the total power consumed is therefore 10%.
权利要求:
Claims (16)
[0001]
REVENDICATIONS1. A three-axis stabilized telecommunications satellite (10), said satellite comprising a set of dissipative equipments constituting the payload of the satellite, said satellite being of substantially parallelepipedal shape whose panels forming two opposite faces, called East (16). ) and West (17), support data transmission antennas (19), and the panels forming two other opposite faces, called North (14) and South (15), have on their outer face radiator surfaces intended for the cooling of the electronic equipment of the satellite, characterized in that the equipment installed on the North (14) and South (15) panels dissipate a thermal power corresponding to less than 25% of the total dissipated power.
[0002]
2. Satellite (10) according to claim 1, characterized in that the equipment installed on the North (14) and South (15) panels dissipate a thermal power corresponding to less than 10% of the total dissipated power.
[0003]
3. Satellite (10) according to claim 1, characterized in that no dissipative equipment is installed on the north (14) and south (15).
[0004]
4. Satellite (10) according to any one of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that the equipment installed on the East (16) and West (17) panels dissipate a thermal power corresponding to more than 75% of the dissipated power total.
[0005]
5. Satellite (10) according to claim 4, characterized in that the equipment installed on the East (16) and West (17) panels dissipate a thermal power corresponding to more than 90% of the total dissipated power. 20 25 30
[0006]
6. Satellite (10) according to claim 1, characterized in that more than 75% of the total dissipated power is dissipated inside the satellite, that is to say in the space between the walls North (14), South (15) and East (16), West (17).
[0007]
7. Satellite (10) according to claim 6, characterized in that more than 90% of the total dissipated power is dissipated inside the satellite (10).
[0008]
8. Satellite (10) according to any one of claims 1 to 7, characterized in that at least a portion of the power electronic equipment (21) is installed on the East (16) and West (17).
[0009]
9. Satellite (10) according to claim 8, characterized in that electronic power equipment is installed on both sides of at least one of East (16) and West (17).
[0010]
10. Satellite (10) according to any one of claims 1 to 9, characterized in that the satellite comprises at least one inner panel (51) parallel to the East (16) and West (17), covering at least one face of electronic power equipment (21).
[0011]
11. Satellite (10) according to claim 10, characterized in that at least one inner panel (51) carries electronic power equipment (21) on both sides. 25
[0012]
12. Satellite (10) according to any one of claims 1 to 11, characterized in that the satellite comprises at least one heat pipe heat transfer device or fluid loop type whose condensers are arranged on one to less North (14) and South (15) panels. 30
[0013]
13. Satellite (10) according to any one of claims 1 to 12, characterized in that at least one of the North (14) and South (15) panels is articulated around one of its common edges with the East panels. (16) and 20West (17), the fluid loops or heat pipes having flexible zones (43) in the vicinity of said articulation.
[0014]
14. Satellite (10) according to any one of claims 1 to 13, characterized in that at least one of the North (14) or South (15) panels is composed of two half-panels, each articulated around their common edge with East (16) or West (17) panel.
[0015]
15. Satellite (10) according to any one of claims 1 to 14, characterized in that the satellite comprises deployable radiative panels, connected by heat transfer devices, for example fluid loop type, equipment installed on East (16) and West (17) panels.
[0016]
16. The method of integrating a telecommunications satellite (10) according to any one of claims 1 to 15, characterized in that the method comprising a step of opening one of the panels North (14) or South (15) to access the payload of the satellite.
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日
EP3089912B1|2018-10-24|
US20160325856A1|2016-11-10|
CA2969146A1|2015-07-09|
WO2015101581A1|2015-07-09|
EP3089912A1|2016-11-09|
US10207825B2|2019-02-19|
FR3015956B1|2018-05-18|
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法律状态:
2015-12-23| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 3 |
2016-12-29| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 4 |
2017-12-29| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 5 |
2018-05-18| CA| Change of address|Effective date: 20180410 |
2018-05-18| CD| Change of name or company name|Owner name: THALES, FR Effective date: 20180410 Owner name: AIRBUS DEFENCE AND SPACE SAS, FR Effective date: 20180410 Owner name: CENTRE NATIONAL D'ETUDES SPATIALES CNES, FR Effective date: 20180410 |
2019-12-27| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 7 |
2020-12-31| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 8 |
2021-12-23| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 9 |
优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
FR1363690A|FR3015956B1|2013-12-30|2013-12-30|TELECOMMUNICATIONS SATELLITE ARCHITECTURE|
FR1363690|2013-12-30|FR1363690A| FR3015956B1|2013-12-30|2013-12-30|TELECOMMUNICATIONS SATELLITE ARCHITECTURE|
US15/108,780| US10207825B2|2013-12-30|2014-12-24|Telecommunications satellite architecture|
PCT/EP2014/079314| WO2015101581A1|2013-12-30|2014-12-24|Telecommunications satellite architecture|
EP14816343.9A| EP3089912B1|2013-12-30|2014-12-24|Telecommunications satellite architecture|
CA2969146A| CA2969146A1|2013-12-30|2014-12-24|Telecommunications satellite architecture|
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