Applications of Commercial-Grade Electronic Components in Space Projects: A Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. COTS Effects on Aerospace Applications
3.1.1. Effects of Radiation
3.1.2. Effects of Mechanical Loading
3.1.3. Effects of Extreme Temperatures
3.2. COTS Methods in Aerospace Applications
3.2.1. Hardware and Software Systems for Error Detection and Correction
3.2.2. Fault Tolerance Testing
3.3. COTS Applications
3.3.1. Military
3.3.2. Aerospace Systems
3.3.3. Radar
3.3.4. Error Detection
3.3.5. High-Reliability Systems
- Physics of Failure (PoF) Analysis: To improve the accuracy of aging-related failure rates, PoF is now commonly applied, which involves digital modeling of the target system while incorporating real-time operating environment parameters.
- Model-Based Engineering (MBE): Tools like Maintenance Aware Design environment (MADe) are utilized to simulate the reliability of COTS components within systems, allowing for on-demand generation of FMEA (Failure Mode and Effects Analysis) and FMECA reports, as discussed in.
- Radiation Hardening by Design (RHBD): Rather than relying solely on hardening, modern techniques focus on architectural mitigation, such as using field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) to detect and correct transient faults caused by radiation.
- Testing Recommendations for Commercial Components.
- Parts-Level Qualification: NASA highlights that card-level, box-level, or system-level testing is insufficient; rigorous, accelerated parts-level screening under voltage, current, and temperature stress is necessary before integration.
- Environmental Stress Screening (ESS): COTS parts often have narrower temperature ratings (0 °C to 70 °C) compared to military-grade (−55 °C to 125 °C), necessitating detailed “uprating” procedures.
- Radiation Testing: Characterizing radiation hardness is critical for space applications.
- Application Recommendations for High-Reliability Systems.
- Suitability Assessment: COTS is most suitable when offering advanced technology not available in the traditional high-reliability portfolio.
- Mitigation Strategies: For high-criticality systems, designers should use up-screened COTS or fault-tolerant architectural designs, while rad-hard components are still suggested for long-duration missions.
- Modular Systems: The defense industry is moving toward “modular open systems approaches” to allow for easier replacement and upgrades of commercial components, as seen in.
4. Discussion
- Software: Error detection using machine learning and forecasting algorithms used in the space sector is included in the COTS software group [20]. Artificial Intelligence (AI) is also considered to be particularly focused on the use of Deep Neural Networks (DNN) on board a spacecraft [44]. Advances in space technology have enabled the miniaturisation of systems and cost reduction. NASA has conducted extensive research on neuromorphic computing as an innovative approach to on-board computing [101]. The software-based self-assessment technique proposed in [102] is another COTS software solution, which is being adopted within the Experimental CubeSat-type platform for technology testing Massively extended Modular Monitoring for Upper Stages (MaMMoTH-Up) project.
- Data storage: COTS-based storage devices include Dynamic random-access memory with a stacked three-dimensional architecture (3D DRAM) system with higher memory capacities [103,104], Micro Secure Digital (Micro-SD) and Static Random Access Memory (SRAM) with a wide range of radiation protection grades [105,106].
- Batteries: Ref. [107] proposes a type of lithium-ion battery based on COTS cells for small spacecraft on a LEO mission, and ref. [108] describes how the range of lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries (ABSL) has identified multiple new cells for use in specific Space applications. In [109,110], the state of the art of the lithium-ion battery-based electrical power subsystem for Earth orbit satellites and launch vehicles for various mission applications is analyzed.
- Hardware-software techniques: Combinations of hardware and software strategies are proposed as COTS solutions. In [111], a technique is described that uses the On-Board Computer (OBC) and fault modelling to compare the effectiveness of fault tolerance techniques for SEU, which were implemented on an embedded Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) System on Chip (SoC) platform. In [112], the development of a high-performance data acquisition, cloud screening, and compression computing system for space imaging spectrometers is proposed, targeting a COTS board based on an embedded FPGA-dual-core-processor SoC. In [113], a ground-space tracking system placed on a 3U CubeSat is presented, in which the PX4 drone operating system is used for the first time in conjunction with a 32-bit microcontroller (STM32) satellite-on-chip system. The main objective of PX4 is to use COTS drone components. In [114], the development of a minimized operating system with built-in redundancy is proposed to reduce dependence on flash memory, in particular with a custom bootloader using a Triple Modular Redundancy (TMR) partition and a Random Access Memory (RAM-based) file system available in the boot process. In [115], different modular redundancy schemes with different voter structures are compared for the qualification of a digital communications receiver, in which a space-grade, radiation-hardened Virtex-5QV (XQR5VFx130) is compared to the COTS Kintex-7 (KC7K325T). Triple modular redundancy with a single voter at the end is suggested, making the Virtex-5QV in this configuration almost as reliable as the Kintex-7 in an N modular redundancy configuration with a highly reliable external voter.
- Electronic devices and sensors: This group includes the development and application of electronic sensors, tests, devices, and systems, as well as power sources. Ref. [116] reports on the design of a low-cost long-wave infrared spectral sensor based on a low-mass, low-power hyperspectral thermal imager with an electronic architecture suitable for using COTS electronic components. The tested electronic components—microcontroller, dedicated flash memory, and camera module—are the main part of the imaging payload in the BIRDS-4 1U CubeSat constellation project in [117], where the in-orbit results are reported. The key functional modules of the Debris Removal and On-Orbit Maintenance Mission (DeBROOM) are implemented using COTS electronic components, whose feasibility is determined by the corresponding budgets [118]. Ref. [119] identifies the types of sensors required in emergency applications for femtosatellites and describes a study of the COTS sensor market, including high-performance, low-cost, and low-power sensors. Ref. [120] describes the use of a mini vector network analyzer as Ground Penetration Radar (GPR) in ultra-wideband radar applications based on COTS products, and the main conclusion is that it is possible to configure a functional ultra-wideband radar based on COTS elements and application-specific software design. Ref. [121] describes an approach to evaluating the reliability of a hardware system based on COTS components for space applications, analyzing the effect of uncertainty in failure rates and reliability estimation on the overall reliability of the system. In [122], multiple parameters that influence the performance of the most advanced low-cost aerosol sensors in measuring particles suspended in the spacecraft cabin are reviewed; these parameters and issues are studied with respect to a low-cost COTS-based aerosol sensor. Ref. [123] describes possible methods for characterizing and calibrating COTS sensors (magnetometer and MEMS gyroscope) on board a 2U-class nanosatellite. The Seeker project [124] is an ultra-low-cost approach to highly automated extravehicular inspection of manned and unmanned spacecraft, designed with extensive use of COTS components and built in-house at NASA’s Johnson Space Centre (JSC). According to [125], which describes the challenges of solar panel performance in deep-space missions, COTS solar cells available for space applications exhibit suboptimal performance under Low Irradiation and Low Temperature (LILT) operating conditions. In [126], a COTS silicon carbide (4H-SiC) ultraviolet (UV) photodiode was electrically characterized as a low-cost spectroscopic X-ray and gamma-ray photon counting detector. In [127], a lightweight, ultra-low-power proton fluence monitor is proposed as a COTS-based space proton sensor to detect the Non-Ionizing Energy Loss (NIEL) process affecting spacecraft onboard electronics. In [128], an experimental study is described that evaluates the COTS Microsoft Kinect v2 as an encounter and capture sensor for small satellites, which is proposed as a low-cost solution for in-orbit servicing and space debris removal. A critical component for adjusting the voltage and current values provided by the power distribution of a space mission is the DC-DC Point-of-Load (PoL) converter. The use of COTS for PoL converters enables significantly higher efficiencies, increased output current, reduced volume and mass, improved Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) performance, and lower costs [129]. In addition, COTS Gallium Nitride (GaN) switching devices have the advantage of fast switching with reliable radiation performance in a small physical space. Ref. [130] describes the design of an in-flight ambient temperature monitoring system for the Line Emission Mapper (LEM) Microcalorimeter Spectrometer, which is based on COTS electronic devices, namely three Warm Front-End Electronics (WFEE) boxes and six Digital Electronics and Event Processors (DEEP) boxes. The LEM mission is an X-ray survey mission designed to study the physics of galaxy formation. The development of the design, testing, and in-orbit operation of the UPMSat-2 solar sensor, composed of six COTS photodiodes, is described in [131], where the first solar sensor data results obtained during the mission have been validated with magnetometers and altitude control systems. The space applicability and reliability of an X-band solid-state power amplifier based on COTS GaN transistors with high electron mobility over a continuous year of operation in deep space are illustrated in [132]. In addition to the main instrumentation, ref. [133] recommends the development and acquisition of compact, low-cost, low-power sensor arrays focused on meteorology and space impacts for all future NASA missions, where possible, compact sensors are presented. In [134], the effects of radiation from Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) space flights on a COTS static RAM-based FPGA device within a digital system with a Triple Modular Redundancy (TMR) Technique are reported.
- Data processing units: This category considers COTS processing units that are suitable for meeting design criteria as solutions for microsatellite platforms in a wide range of missions. In [135], a test campaign is presented to identify one or more commercially available microprocessors with the latest technological innovations that meet a series of system criteria to be suitable as processors for microsatellite platforms for a wide range of missions. Ref. [136] describes a reconfigurable architecture for an embedded processor that is fully compatible with space requirements for critical space exploration systems, based on a dynamically reconfigurable multi-accelerator architecture. In [137], the design, implementation, and results of a set of IP processing cores that perform on-board hyperspectral image compression in compliance with the Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS) 123.0-B-1 lossless standard are described. In [138], a heterogeneous multi-core SoC processor is evaluated for use on board spacecraft to support digital signal processors and novel, computationally demanding AI functionalities. The applicability of integrated Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) in space is studied in [139] by analyzing current space application domains to identify software domains useful for space and integrated GPU domains to assess whether integrated GPUs can meet the necessary computing power and identify the challenges that need to be addressed for their adoption in space. The multiMIND processing system, based on the latest Multiprocessor on Chip (MPSoC) COTS Xilinx Zynq Ultrascale+, has been proposed by Thales Alenia Space in [140] as a highly flexible, multi-mission solution with a modular software framework. The main objective is to meet the processing requirements of modern NewSpace applications in computing tasks such as signal, image, and AI algorithms. In [141], a variety of algorithms trained on Earth or Mars images and standard deep learning models for image classification were evaluated using inference neural network models deployed on COTS Qualcomm Snapdragon and Movidius Myriad X processors hosted on Hewlett Packard Enterprise’s Spaceborne Computer-2 aboard the International Space Station. COTS electronic hardware and On Board Software (OBSW) are designed and implemented in the HERCCULES mission in [142] as an affordable, fast, simple, and reliable solution for the application of balloons in thermal modelling and analysis of stratospheric systems.
- Design Trade-offs: The core of the conflict is that high computational or transmission performance generally requires cutting-edge technologies (such as 7 nm chips) that are inherently more vulnerable to radiation and have less well-understood failure mechanisms than mature, robust technologies.
- Performance vs. Reliability: Commercial-Off-The-Shelf (COTS) components offer superior speeds at a fraction of the cost but lack the traceability and radiation tolerance of military-grade or space-grade components.
- Effectiveness: If one inexpensive satellite fails, the others cover its function. This enables high overall throughput and low per-unit costs.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| 3D DRAM | Dynamic random-access memory with a stacked three-dimensional architecture |
| 2U | Two CubeSat standard units |
| 3U | Three CubeSat standard units |
| 4H-SiC | Silicon carbide |
| 6U | Six CubeSat standard units |
| ABSL | Range of lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries |
| ACEDR | Automatic Compiler Error Detection and Recovery |
| AI | Artificial Intelligence |
| BIRDS-4 1U | A CubeSat from the BIRDS-4 program |
| BLDC | BrushLess Direct Current |
| CCSDS | Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems |
| CCSDS 123.0-B-1 | A lossless compression standard for space imagery defined by CCSDS |
| CO2 | Carbon dioxide |
| COTS | Commercial-Off-The-Shelf |
| CPU | Central Processing Unit |
| CubeSat | Standardized Miniaturized Cube Satellite |
| DC | Direct Current |
| DD | Displacement Damage |
| DeBROOM | Debris Removal and On-Orbit Maintenance Mission |
| DEEP | Digital Electronics and Event Processors |
| DNN | Deep Neural Networks |
| e-Cube | Experimental facility for testing and developing space technologies |
| EEE | Electrical, Electronic, and Electromechanical |
| EMI | Electromagnetic Interference |
| EPS | Electrical Power System |
| ESCC | European Space Components Coordination |
| FDIR | Fault Detection, Isolation, and Recovery |
| FMECA | Failure Mode, Effects, and Criticality Analysis |
| FPGA | Field-Programmable Gate Array |
| GaN | Gallium Nitride |
| GPR | Ground Penetration Radar |
| GPUs | Graphics Processing Unit |
| GSE | Ground Support Equipment |
| GSFC | Goddard Space Flight Centre |
| H2O | Water |
| IEEE | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers |
| IMUs | Inertial Measurement Units |
| InSAR | Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar |
| ISS | International Space Station |
| IoT | Internet of Things |
| JSC | Johnson Space Centre |
| Kintex-7 (KC7K325T) | An FPGA device from the Kintex-7 family designed for high-performance, energy-efficient applications in advanced digital systems |
| LEM | Line Emission Mapper |
| LEO | Low Earth Orbit |
| LiDAR | Light Detection and Ranging |
| LILT | Low Irradiation and Low Temperature |
| MaMMoTH-Up | Massively extended Modular Monitoring for Upper Stages |
| MDPI | Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute |
| MEMS | Microelectromechanical systems |
| MEO | Medium Earth Orbit |
| Micro-SD | Micro Secure Digital |
| Microsoft Kinect v2 COTS | A commercial depth and motion sensor used for capturing three-dimensional data. |
| MIL-STD | Military Standards |
| MOSFET | Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistor |
| MPCS2017 | Micro propulsion and CubeSats |
| MPSoC | Multiprocessor on Chip |
| multiMIND | A multi-core processing platform for high-performance applications |
| NASA | National Aeronautics and Space Administration |
| NESC | NASA Engineering and Safety Centre |
| NIEL | Non-Ionizing Energy Loss |
| O2 | Molecular oxygen |
| OBC | On-Board Computer |
| OBSW | On Board Software |
| POD | Precision Orbit Determination and Knowledge |
| PoL | Point-of-Load |
| PRISMA | Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses |
| PX4 | An open-source autopilot software platform used in drones and autonomous vehicles |
| RaCERS | Radar Cluster for Earth Remote Sensing |
| RAM | Random Access Memory |
| RF | Radio Frequency |
| RMF | Risk Management Framework |
| ROMEO | Radar Module for Earth Observation |
| SAR | Synthetic Aperture Radar |
| SEB | Single-Event Burnout |
| SEE | Single-Event Effects |
| SEFI | Single-Event Functional Interrupt |
| SEGR | Single-Event Gate Rupture |
| SEHE | Single-Event Hard Error or Stuck Bit |
| SEL | Single-Event Latch-up |
| SET | Single-Event Transient |
| SEU | Single-Event Upset or Soft Error |
| SIHFT | Software-Implemented Hardware Fault Tolerance |
| SoC | System-on-Chip |
| SRAM | Static Random Access Memory |
| STM32 | A family of 32-bit microcontrollers based on the ARM Cortex-M architecture, used in embedded systems for control, processing, and data acquisition |
| TCB | Telecom Module |
| TID | Total Ionizing Dose |
| TMR | Triple Modular Redundancy |
| UPMSat-2 | An experimental satellite developed by the Polytechnic University of Madrid. |
| UV | Ultraviolet |
| Virtex-5QV (XQR5VFx130) | Radiation-tolerant FPGA based on the Virtex-5 architecture, designed for space applications and high-reliability electronic systems |
| WFEE | Warm Front-End Electronics |
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García-Rodríguez, L.d.C.; Mendoza-Barcenas, M.A.; Díaz-Carmona, J.; Sancén-Plaza, A.; Chinea-Mujica, L.E.; Pérez-Pinal, F.J.; Espinosa-Calderón, A. Applications of Commercial-Grade Electronic Components in Space Projects: A Review. Aerospace 2026, 13, 495. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace13060495
García-Rodríguez LdC, Mendoza-Barcenas MA, Díaz-Carmona J, Sancén-Plaza A, Chinea-Mujica LE, Pérez-Pinal FJ, Espinosa-Calderón A. Applications of Commercial-Grade Electronic Components in Space Projects: A Review. Aerospace. 2026; 13(6):495. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace13060495
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarcía-Rodríguez, Luz del Carmen, Mario Alberto Mendoza-Barcenas, Javier Díaz-Carmona, Agustín Sancén-Plaza, Luis Enrique Chinea-Mujica, Francisco Javier Pérez-Pinal, and Alejandro Espinosa-Calderón. 2026. "Applications of Commercial-Grade Electronic Components in Space Projects: A Review" Aerospace 13, no. 6: 495. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace13060495
APA StyleGarcía-Rodríguez, L. d. C., Mendoza-Barcenas, M. A., Díaz-Carmona, J., Sancén-Plaza, A., Chinea-Mujica, L. E., Pérez-Pinal, F. J., & Espinosa-Calderón, A. (2026). Applications of Commercial-Grade Electronic Components in Space Projects: A Review. Aerospace, 13(6), 495. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace13060495

