Dayton Daily News

Local technology goes far — roving around on Mars

Generator with area ties is part of vehicle that landed on planet.

- By Thomas Gnau

Dayton is not just the birthplace of aviation. You might think of it also as the home of deep space power generation.

The power generator keeping the new Mars Perservera­nce rover warm has a strong Dayton-area pedigree.

The rover, which landed on Mars on Thursday, is powered by radioactiv­e plutonium generator, which traces its lineage back to the radioisoto­pe thermoelec­tric generator invented by scientists at what was the Mound complex in Miamisburg in the mid-1950s.

Mound is the birthplace of the technology more so than the

materials, “because obviously the materials have evolved quite a lot” in the decades since, said University of Dayton Research Institute (UDRI) scientist Chad Barklay, a former Mound employee with his UDRI colleague, engineer Allan Tolson.

“That was very exciting the day it landed, and it landed safely,” Tolson said. “I know I was very humbled but pleased, happy. It has been a part of history, something you can tell your kids and grandkids about. It’s overwhelmi­ng sometimes.”

The Mound complex, atop a hill in Miamisburg, manufactur­ed nuclear weapons parts and performed nuclear materials research for decades. The site operated from 1948 to 2003, and at its peak employed about 2,500 people, occupying 116 buildings covering 306 acres.

The work that was there was eventually moved to Idaho, and the area today is a private business park.

Barklay and Tolson chose not to move to Idaho, and they both landed at UDRI, where this type of generator was tested extensivel­y, to determine how well it can weather the extremes of space travel and Martian climate.

With cots and sleeping bags, Barklay and Allen Tolson spent a memorable 36 hours camped next to the one of the generators in 2017 while they heated the unit to a temperatur­e of 428F to see how the Mars Curiosity Rover power system would hold up.

Nuclear power has distinct advantages over solar panels, which the Mars rovers also use. The Opportunit­y rover was knocked out of commission when a planetary dust storm blocked it from the sun’s light in 2018. The rover was declared “dead” the next year.

The new rover still faces plenty of dangers. But nuclear power means NASA scientists can mostly rest easy about that possibilit­y.

“That’s why you need a thermoelec­tric generator of some sort,” Barklay said.

This isn’t the same grade of plutonium used in nuclear weapons, and it is robustly encased with lasting protection as a primary goal.

Barklay is group leader for UDRI’s advanced high-temperatur­e materials research effort, performing qualificat­ion and evaluation tests on generators in support of not only the Curiosity and Perseveran­ce rovers but future deep-space missions.

Their research is sponsored by the Department of Energy and helps shed light on the performanc­e of the power units over time, UDRI said.

UDRI’s work is not the only local contributi­on to Mars exploratio­n. Technology created by L3Harris in Mason is helping NASA receive key data and images from the rover.

About half of L3’s nearly 800 Mason employees were directly or indirectly involved with the mission.

“There’s not a lot of people who know there’s a really significan­t space company right here in Ohio with a lot of employees, a lot of good high-tech jobs,” Mark Dapore, chief technologi­st for L3Harris, told the Dayton Daily News last week.

 ?? STAFF / FILE ?? University of Dayton Research Institute scientists and engineers Chadwick Barklay (left), Daniel Kramer and Richard Harris test a special generator that can handle weather extremes, to put it mildly.
STAFF / FILE University of Dayton Research Institute scientists and engineers Chadwick Barklay (left), Daniel Kramer and Richard Harris test a special generator that can handle weather extremes, to put it mildly.
 ?? NASA / FILE 2019 ?? The electricit­y needed to operate NASA’s Mars 2020 rover is provided by a power system called a MultiMissi­on Radioisoto­pe Thermoelec­tric Generator, or MMRTG.
NASA / FILE 2019 The electricit­y needed to operate NASA’s Mars 2020 rover is provided by a power system called a MultiMissi­on Radioisoto­pe Thermoelec­tric Generator, or MMRTG.

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