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Technical Paper

Subscale Testbed for Characterizing Regenerable Adsorbents used in Air Revitalization of Spacecraft Atmospheres

2009-07-12
2009-01-2526
A sub-scale testbed for characterizing the dynamic performance of regenerable adsorbents for filtering trace contaminants (TCs) from cabin atmospheres was built and tested. Regenerable adsorbents employed in pressure-swing adsorption (PSA) systems operate in a dynamic environment, where they undergo repeated loading / regeneration cycles. Adsorbents have a given chemical specificity for non-methane TCs depending on their composition, and on the humidity and temperature at which they operate. However, their ability to filter TCs is also affected by contact time, cycle time, regeneration vacuum quality and thermal conditioning.
Technical Paper

Testbed for Determining the Filtering Capacities of COTS Adsorbents

2007-07-09
2007-01-3137
A lab-scale testbed for screening and characterizing the chemical specificity of commercial “off-the-shelf” (COTS) polymer adsorbents was built and tested. COTS polymer adsorbents are suitable candidates for future trace contaminant (TC) control technologies. Regenerable adsorbents could reduce overall TC control system mass and volume by minimizing the amounts of consumables to be resupplied and stored. However, the chemical specificity of these COTS adsorbents for non-methane volatile organic compounds (NMVOCs) (e.g., methanol, ethanol, dichloromethane, acetone, etc) commonly found in spacecraft is unknown. Furthermore, the effect of humidity on their filtering capacity is not well characterized. The testbed, composed of a humidifier, an incubator, and a gas generator, delivers NMVOC gas streams to conditioned sorbent tubes.
Technical Paper

Critical Aspects of Starch Determination in Plant Tissues and a New Approach Utilizing HPAEC/PAD for the Quantification of Starch-Derived Glucose

2005-07-11
2005-01-2773
This paper investigates error-contributing factors frequently encountered during plant starch content determinations by the widely used methodology based on the enzymatic/colorimetric determination of glucose released from enzymatic hydrolysis of starch. Due to the dynamics and variability of starch levels in plant tissues, inaccurate results were found to be associated with sampling and tissue preparation protocols. Other error-contributing factors included: (1) incomplete removal of interfering soluble sugars before starch hydrolysis, (2) non-specific hydrolysis during gelatinisation of starch granules, (3) incomplete hydrolysis of starch due to insufficient amounts of hydrolyzing enzyme, and (4) improper use of starch standards. A unified procedure that only requires 10-25 mg dry material is presented.
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.
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