Refine Your Search

Search Results

Technical Paper

Metal Oxide Regenerate Carbon Dioxide Removal System for an Advanced Portable Life Support System

1989-07-01
891595
The extravehicular activity (EVA) requirements for Space Station Freedom and future long-duration space missions demand advanced technologies for the life support subsystems in the astronaut portable life support system (PLSS). A NASA-funded program is currently underway to develop a full-scale, breadboard, regenerate metal oxide carbon dioxide (CO2) removal system. This technology is a promising concept to replace the lithium hydroxide absorber presently used for removing CO2 in the recycled breathing gas in the PLSS, but cannot be efficiently regenerated to be used for another EVA mission. In the metal oxide carbon dioxide removal system, an “active” metal oxide compound, contained within a solid absorbent material, effectively removes the CO2 by chemically reacting to form a metal carbonate during astronaut EVA. The absorbent is then regenerated thermally, by decomposing the resulting carbonate and thereby releasing CO2, to reform the metal oxide.
X