Abstract

A preliminary study of materials exposed in space in low-earth orbit for nearly six years (in the NASA Long-Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF)) has revealed a range of micrometeorite and microparticle impact craters and blisters of unknown origin on aluminum alloy 6061-T6 samples on the leading edge of the satellite. In addition these samples were covered with an enormous range of reaction products which included crystals and polycrystalline aggregates which originated in part from other reactions and atomic oxygen degradation taking place in systems proximate to the alloy samples.A replication-type lift-off techniques was developed to remove reaction products (crystals and polycrystals, etc.) and debris from the specimen surfaces in order to isolate them from the background substrate without creating microchemical or microstructural artifacts. This technique culminates in extracted surface features resting on a carbon support film which is virtually “invisible” to observation by electron microscopy and non-dispersive x-ray analysis.

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