The Ananas Hypothesis: A Scientific Case for Pineapple-Derived Ablative Composite Materials in Spacecraft Thermal Protection Systems
Description
The Orion spacecraft heat shield exhibited anomalous ablation behaviour during the Artemis I uncrewed mission of December 2022, with charred material liberating from the reformulated Avcoat ablator across more than one hundred discrete locations. NASA subsequently identified the root cause as a permeability collapse in which trapped pyrolysis gases accumulated beneath a sealed char layer during skip reentry, producing localised pressure events and spallation. The crewed Artemis II mission of April 2026 flew on the same shield configuration, mitigating risk through a steeper reentry trajectory that reduced crew abort options and was publicly opposed by former NASA astronaut and heat shield specialist Charles Camarda. Artemis III, the first crewed lunar landing, will require a heat shield redesign at the material level. This paper proposes that pineapple peel (Ananas comosus) constitutes a credible bio-derived precursor for a next-generation charring ablative composite, designated the Pineapple Peel Ablative Composite (PPAC), whose char architecture addresses the permeability failure intrinsically. The central claim is that lignin, one of pineapple peel's primary structural polymers, degrades continuously across the 160 to 900 °C range and therefore maintains char layer microporosity throughout the complete ablation thermal event, eliminating the conditions responsible for the Artemis I failure. The hypothesis rests on three converging lines of evidence: pineapple peel's documented lignocellulosic chemistry, the operational precedent of cellulose-derived ablatives in aerospace use, and the observed thermal behaviour of pineapple peel under sustained pyrolysis. A five-stage laboratory research programme is proposed, situated within a broader argument for African participation in frontier materials science.
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PPAC_Concept_Paper_Wyetey_2026_Zenodo.pdf
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Additional details
Dates
- Submitted
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2026-05-28