Ultralow-density double-layer silica aerogel fabrication for the intact capture of cosmic dust in low-Earth orbits
Makoto Tabata, Hideyuki Kawai, Hajime Yano, Eiichi Imai, Hirofumi, Hashimoto, Shin-ichi Yokobori, Akihiko Yamagishi

TL;DR
This paper reports the development and production of ultralow-density double-layer silica aerogel tiles designed for capturing cosmic dust intact during space missions, specifically for the Tanpopo experiment on the ISS.
Contribution
It introduces a novel fabrication method for ultralow-density double-layer silica aerogel tiles optimized for space dust collection, balancing scientific performance and mechanical robustness.
Findings
Successfully fabricated 60 aerogel tiles with desired properties.
Demonstrated suitability of aerogel tiles for space flight requirements.
Established a scalable production procedure for double-layer aerogel tiles.
Abstract
The fabrication of an ultralow-density hydrophobic silica aerogel for the intact capture cosmic dust during the Tanpopo mission is described. The Tanpopo experiment performed on the International Space Station orbiting the Earth includes the collection of terrestrial and interplanetary dust samples on a silica aerogel capture medium exposed to space for later ground-based biological and chemical analyses. The key to the mission's success is the development of high-performance capture media, and the major challenge is to satisfy the mechanical requirements as a spacecraft payload while maximizing the performance for intact capture. To this end, an ultralow-density (0.01 g cm) soft aerogel was employed in combination with a relatively robust 0.03 g cm aerogel. A procedure was also established for the mass production of double-layer aerogel tiles formed with a 0.01 g…
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