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Life Support for Human Spaceflight

Water Recovery, Waste Management, and Plant Growth Systems

Karen D. Pickering, Ph.D. NASA Johnson Space Center Crew and Thermal Systems Division

Agenda • Life Support – a brief refresher

• Water Reclamation Systems

• Solid Waste Management

• Bioregenerative Life Support

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Life Support – an overview

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

General classes of life support systems • Regenerative/Closed

Loop • Recycling of resources

(low consumable/resupply) • Minimized overboard

losses • Increased power, thermal,

and initial mass • Lower reliability due to

complexity • Usually about 3 months of

duration required to make the trade off beneficial

• Non Regenerative/Open Loop

• Backpacking mission (high consumables/resupply)

• Simple, reliable • Resources are linearly

dependent on flight time

Open-loop life support system resupply mass 12,000 kg/person-year

(26,500 lbs/person-year)

Systems Maintenance 2.1%

Gases lost to space 2.1%

Crew Supplies 2.1%

Food (dry) 2.2%

Oxygen 2.5%

Water 89%

10,680 kg (23,545 lbs)

(2827 gallons)

Human life support requirements

Mass balance

WATER RECLAMATION SYSTEMS

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Spacecraft water cycle

• Water requirements vary as exploration missions mature

• Wastewater characteristics change

Water requirements change as mission matures

The Spacecraft Water Cycle

• Stages of the water recovery process: • Stabilization • Wastewater Storage • Primary Processing • Brine Water Recovery • Post-processing • Disinfection • Potable Water Storage

Shuttle

Shuttle • Water generated through fuel cell reaction

• Excess water and wastewater dumped overboard or transferred to ISS

• Water dumps are propulsive!

• Vent lines must be heated!

International Space Station

International Space Station • Recycle urine and

humidity condensate

• Distillation

• Adsorption

• Ion exchange

• Catalytic oxidation

ISS Life Support Systems

15

Stored Water • Contingency Water

Containers (CWC) • Originally intended for

“contingency” use • Laminated polymer

bladder with a Nomex restraint

• Silver ions used as disinfectant

• 45 liter capacity

Stored Water • Contingency

Water Containers – Iodine (CWC-I)

• Approximately 150 onboard ISS

• FEP bladder with Nomex restraint

• Iodine used as disinfectant

• 22 liter capacity

CWC-I

The Spacecraft Water Cycle • Stages of the water

recovery process: • Stabilization • Wastewater Storage • Primary Processing • Brine Water Recovery • Post-processing • Disinfection • Potable Water Storage

Wastewater Storage & Stabilization • Some water recovery systems

rely on minimal microbial growth and prevention of urea breakdown to ammonia

• Stabilization typically involves the addition of strong acids/oxidizers

• The goal of current stabilization studies is to find alternatives to hazardous acids/oxidizers (alternate chemicals or biological stabilization).

Urine and Bronopol samples showing no microbial growth.

Bacterial growth in imidazolidinyl

urea.

What happens when you DON’T stabilize

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Distillation systems • Planetary missions:

simple evaporation

• Microgravity missions: forced to use rotary, vacuum driven distillation process

• Recovery is limited by solubility

Urine and solubility

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Urine solids on orbit

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Membrane systems • Membrane systems are ideal for

removal of inorganic solids downstream of a biological water process

• Forward osmosis: low fouling potential and high rejection of contaminants

• Ultrafiltration: high flux, rejection of large contaminants

• Reverse osmosis systems produce near potable quality water

• Electrodialysis has potential for calcium scale prevention

Forward osmosis / reverse osmosis

Biological Water Processors • Low energy, regenerable

treatment process

• Key questions include reliability, rapid startup, and scalability

JSC 2001 JSC 2004 TTU 2011

Alternative water processor

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Brine Water Recovery • Membrane and

distillation technologies all produce brines

• Approximately 15% of daily wastewater is lost as brine

• Solids handling is greatest challenge to development

• There is currently no brine recovery system in flight.

Bladder Assembly, prior to installation

into Restraint.

June 1, 2012 Burst Test 61.53 psig

Temporary Brine and Urine Storage System

Integrated treatment systems Feed Pump

FO Membrane Contactor

Bioreactor

RO Module

s

Product Water Tank

Osmotic Agent Loop

Wastewater Feed • Quantify consumables,

power requirements • Demonstrate water quality of produced water • Define integration issues for future system developme

exploration habitats

Alternative water processor integrated test

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

WRS Interfaces

Water Recovery

Air Revitalization

Food Production

Crop Production

Habitability

Solid Waste

Recovered Solid Waste Water ISRU / EVA

Insitu Water EVA waste

EVA supply Wastewater

or intermediate water

SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Function of solid waste management • Trash management

• Fecal disposal

• Reduce, reuse, recycle!

• (and stabilize too)

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Stabilization • Prevent bacterial growth and odors

from wet trash

• Shuttle • Wet trash stored below floor

• Vented to vacuum

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Compaction Drying

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

Technology options • Drying

• Freeze drying

• Heat melt compaction

• Disposal • Pyrolysis

• Incineratin

• Biological treatment

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

BIOREGENERATIVE LIFE SUPPORT

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

What types of plants would be needed? • Crops--high yielding and nutritious

• High harvest index (edible / total biomass)

• Horticultural considerations • planting, harvesting, pollination, propagation

• Environmental considerations • photoperiod, temperature, mineral nutrition

• Processing requirements

• Dwarf or low growing types

Cultivar Comparisons and Crop Breeding

← Utah State: Super Dwarf Wheat Apogee Wheat Perigee Wheat Super Dwarf Rice

Dwarf Pepper ↑ and Tomato ↓

Recirculating Hydroponics with Crops • Conserve Water &

Nutrients • Eliminate Water Stress • Optimize Mineral Nutrition • Facilitate Harvesting

Wheat / Utah State

Soybean KSC Sweetpotato

Tuskegee

Root Zone Crops in Nutrient Film Technique (NFT)

Wheeler et al., 1990. Amer. Potato J. 67:177-187; Mackowiak et al. 1998. HortScience 33:650-651

Watering Systems for Weightlessness

Wright et al. 1988. Trans. ASAE 31:440-446; Dreschel and Sager. 1989. HortScience 24:944-947.

Porous Ceramic Tubes to Contain the Water

High Yields from High Light and CO2 Enrichment

Wheat - 3-4 x World Record Potato - 2 x World Record

Lettuce-Exceeded Commercial Yield Models

Utah State Univ.

Wisconsin Biotron

NASA Kennedy Space Center

• Bubgee, B.G. and F.B. Salisbury. 1988. Plant Physiol. 88:869-878. • Wheeler, R.M., T.W. Tibbitts, A.H. Fitzpatrick. 1991. Crop Science 31:1209-1213.

Ethylene in Closed Systems

Epinastic Potato Leaves

at ~40 ppb

Epinastic Wheat Leaves at ~120 ppb

Electric Lighting Systems

High-Pressure Sodium

LEDs

Microwave Sulfur

Fluorescent

LED for Plant Growth

Red...photosynthesis Blue...photomorphogenesis Green...human vision

John Sager, KSC, Testing Prototype Flight Plant Chambers with LEDs

Light, Productivity, & Crop Area Requirements

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80

Light (mol m-2 day-1)

Area

Req

uire

d (m

2 / p

erso

n)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

Prod

uctiv

ity (g

m-2

day

-1) Productivity Area

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

Bright Sunny Day on Mars

Capture and Delivery of Solar Light for Plants

Space Life Sciences Laboratory Kennedy Space Center, FL

Surface Deployable Greenhouse Concepts →

• Inflatable, low mass, easy stowage

• Might be covered at night • Operated at low pressure

One Human and 11 m2 of Wheat !

Nigel Packham, NASA Johnson Space Center

Contact and acknowledgements Karen D. Pickering

EC3

Life Support Systems Branch

NASA Johnson Space Center

Houston, TX 77058

Thank you to:

KSC / Dr. Ray Wheeler

ARC / John Fisher and Wiggy Wignarajah

April 18, 2013 Karen D. Pickering

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