HARDWARE / PRODUCT

k-Core Encapsulated Graphite Thermal Solutions

Boyd Corporation (Aavid)
k-Core Encapsulated Graphite Thermal Solutions

Boyd Corporation's k-Core is a proprietary encapsulated Annealed Pyrolytic Graphite thermal-conduction material used to build lightweight, high-conductivity radiator panels, thermal doublers, cold plates, heat spreaders, and thermal straps for satellites and spacecraft.

Technical specifications

Effective thermal conductivity (k-Core assembly)
up to 1000 W/m·K
APG core in-plane thermal conductivity
up to 1700 W/m·K
Thermal straps effective conductivity
up to 1200 W/m·K
Radiator panel operating temperature range
-40°C to +72°C
Heat dissipation improvement
≥40°C reduction vs. aluminum equivalent
Gravity independence
Rated for 0g to >9g environments
Encapsulant materials
Aluminum and copper alloys, ceramics, carbon-fiber composites
Core material
Annealed Pyrolytic Graphite
Technology readiness (thermal straps)
TRL 9, qualified in space
Flight heritage
NASA/JHU-APL DART mission radiator panels (2022); U.S. Space Force WSF-M/USSF-62 thermal doubler (2024)

About

k-Core is Boyd Corporation’s flagship space-thermal product platform, built around Annealed Pyrolytic Graphite that is fully hermetically encapsulated inside a structural shell (aluminum, copper, ceramic, or carbon-fiber composite). The APG core provides very high in-plane thermal conductivity while the encapsulant supplies mechanical strength, launch-vibration durability, and CTE-matching to electronics, avoiding interface issues associated with heat pipes. It is offered in multiple form factors — radiator panels, thermal doublers, cold plates, heat spreaders/electronic chassis, and flexible thermal straps — for passive, gravity-independent thermal management of communications and government satellites, spacecraft electronics, and high-power avionics. k-Core has documented spaceflight heritage: two k-Core aluminum-encapsulated-graphite radiator panels flew on NASA/Johns Hopkins APL’s DART spacecraft (impacted asteroid Dimorphos, September 2022); a k-Core carbon-fiber/APG thermal doubler flew on the U.S. Space Force WSF-M weather satellite launched on USSF-62 in March 2024; and k-Core thermal straps are marketed as TRL 9, ‘Qualified in Space.’

Documentation

Need the full ICD, test reports or a specific revision? Ask the supplier directly.

Source: www.boydcorp.com ↗