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Technical Paper

Microbial Characterization of Compacted vs. Non-Compacted Simulated Orion Crew Vehicle Food Trash Compartment Waste

2007-07-09
2007-01-3268
The effects of volume-reduction via compaction (VR-C) on microbial loads and microbially-produced noxious odors during post-treatment storage were investigated. The Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) / Orion simulated food trash compartment wastes (FTCW) consisted of 80% food trash with packaging and 20% wipes. Compaction was compared with a non-compacted control and will provide a baseline for comparison with other treatment technologies. The first study was a timecourse with post-treatment storage durations of 1, 2, 4, and 6 weeks. Key response variables were: O2 consumption and CO2 production from waste biodegradation and microbiological assays consisting of total counts and culturable counts of (a) aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, (b) aerobic and anaerobic spore-forming bacteria, (c) specific bacteria including Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Burkholderia cepacia, and Staphylococcus aureus counts, and (d) molds at run termination.
Technical Paper

Designing a Reusable Ethylene Filter Cartridge for Plant Flight Hardware: Characterization of Thermally Desorbing Compounds

2005-07-11
2005-01-2953
The chemical specificity of several adsorbents, capable of being recycled by thermal desorption, was determined using volatile organic compounds (VOCs) found in ISS cabin air. These VOC adsorbents will be used to design a reusable filter to control ethylene in plant growth chambers and other STS/ISS biological payloads. A reusable filter to remove plant-produced ethylene from plant growth chambers could help minimize the mass and power use of plant flight hardware. Spaceflight-rated plant growth chambers employ either passive or active catalytic scrubbers for maintaining acceptable levels of VOCs. Passive systems require consumables, while active systems require power and their performance can be degraded in high humidity environments. Each adsorbent was loaded with known amounts of VOCs at a known flow rate. The filtering capacity and chemical specificity of each compound was determined from measurements pre- and post-filter VOC concentration.
Technical Paper

A More Completely Defined CELSS

1994-06-01
941292
A CELSS has been defined based on current or near-term technology. The CELSS was sized to support the metabolic load of four people on the Moon for ten years. A metabolic load of 14 MJ/person/day is assumed, including an average of 2.6 hr of EVA/person/day. Close to 100% closure of water, and oxygen, and 85% closure of the food loop is assumed. With 15% of the calories supplied from Earth, this should provide adequate dietary variety for the crew along with vitamin and mineral requirements. Other supply and waste removal requirements are addressed. The basic shell used is a Space Station Freedom 7.3 m (24 ft) module. This is assumed to be buried in regolith to provide protection from radiation, meteoroids, and thermal extremes. A solar dynamic power system is assumed, with a design life of 10 years delivering power at 368 kWh/kg. Initial estimates of size are that 73 m2 of plant growth area are required, giving a plant growth volume of about 73 m3.
Technical Paper

Condensate Recycling in Closed Plant Growth Chambers

1994-06-01
941543
Water used in the Controlled Ecological Life Support System (CELSS) Breadboard Project at the Kennedy Space Center is being recycled. Condensation is collected in the air ducts, filtered and deionized, and resupplied to the system for nutrient solutions, supplemental humidification, solvents and diluents. While the system functions well from a process control standpoint, precise and accurate tracking of water movement through the system to answer plant physiological questions is not consistent. Possible causes include hardware errors, undetected vapor loss from chamber leakage, and unmeasured changes in water volume in the plant growth trays.
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