A close-up of a sample similar to those sent to the ISS to study their durability in harsh space conditions.

Leaner and Meaner: Materials Tested in Space Could Help Build More Space-Resilient Satellites

05.18.2026

Researchers at the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) and Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech) are sending experimental polymer materials to the International Space Station (ISS) as part of the MISSE-22 mission to better understand how they withstand real space conditions. 

Mounted outside the ISS and exposed to atomic oxygen, extreme temperatures, and radiation, the samples will later be returned to Earth for detailed analysis. The findings will help improve materials for future satellite constellations. The project brings together government, academic, and industry partners, including the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP), California-based R&D firm Hedgefog Research Inc., DuPont de Nemours, and Aegis Aerospace. 

Read the full story on the Georgia Tech Research news site

GTRI Senior Research Engineer and Principal Investigator Elena Plis and her team are sending new lightweight, research-grade polymers to the ISS for months of in-orbit exposure and later testing on Earth. Here, she is pictured in a laboratory at a GTRI facility in Atlanta, GA (Photo Credit: Sean McNeil, GTRI).

Newsletter

Sign up for monthly updates on GTRI’s research, activity, and more.

Related News

News stories
GTRI principal research engineer Marshall Bronston has become one of only slightly more than 300 individuals worldwide to earn the Expert Systems Engineering Professional (ESEP) certification through the International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE).
News stories
STEM@GTRI's 2021 internship program, which lasted five weeks and was held virtually amid Covid-19, included 63 high schoolers from across Georgia who were selected from an application pool of 364, and 30 professionals at the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) representing six of the eight GTRI labs and one support unit.
News stories
The Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) is developing a robot that utilizes deep learning to automate certain aspects of the peach cultivation process, which could be a boon for many Georgia peach farms grappling with a shortage of workers.