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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

Effects of Relative Humidity on the Adsorption of Dichloromethane by Carbosieve SIII

2007-07-09
2007-01-3249
Carbosieve SIII was used to filter dichloromethane (DCM) from a simulated spacecraft gas stream. This adsorbent was tested as a possible commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) filtration solution to controlling spacecraft air quality. DCM is a halocarbon commonly used in manufacturing for cleaning and degreasing and is a typical component of equipment offgassing in spacecraft. The performance of the filter was measured in dry and humid atmospheres. A known concentration of DCM was passed through the adsorbent at a known flow rate. The adsorbent removed dichloromethane until it reached the breakthrough volume. Carbosieve SIII exposed to dry atmospheric conditions adsorbed more DCM than when exposed to humid air. Carbosieve SIII is a useful thermally regenerated adsorbent for filtering DCM from spacecraft cabin air. However, in humid environments the gas passes through the filter sooner due to co-adsorption of additional water vapor from the atmosphere.
Technical Paper

Assessment of Silver Based Disinfection Technology for CEV and Future US Spacecraft: Microbial Efficacy

2007-07-09
2007-01-3142
This work describes the microbiological assessment and materials compatibility of a silver-based biocide as an alternative to iodine for the Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) and future spacecraft potable water systems. In addition to physical and operational anti-microbial counter-measures, the prevention of microbial growth, biofilm formation, and microbiologically induced corrosion in water distribution and storage systems requires maintenance of a biologically-effective, residual biocide concentration in solution and on the wetted surfaces of the system. Because of the potential for biocide depletion in water distribution systems and the development of acquired biocide resistance within microbial populations, even sterile water with residual biocide may, over time, support the growth and/or proliferation of bacteria that pose a risk to crew health and environmental systems.
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

Stability and reliability of biological reactors

1997-07-01
972549
Bioregenerative resource recovery components for Advanced Life Support systems will need to be reliable and stable for long duration space travel. Since 1989, bioregenerative life support research at the ALS Breadboard Project has examined processing of inedible crop residues in bioreactors for recovery of nutrients for replenishment of crop hydroponic solutions. Bioreactor operation has been reliable as demonstrated by continuous operation for up to 418 days with long periods of steady state conditions. Bioreactors have demonstrated stability following unplanned, non-lethal perturbations in pH, temperature, dissolved oxygen, and inedible residue supply. In each instance, a rapid return to steady state conditions was observed.
Technical Paper

Bioprocessing Wheat Residues to Recycle Plant Nutrients to the JSC Variable Pressure Growth Chamber during the L/MLSTP Phase III Test

1998-07-13
981706
The KSC Breadboard Scale Aerobic Bioreactor (B-SAB) was used to bioprocess inedible wheat crop residues to provide recycled nutrients to support crop growth in the JSC Variable Pressure Growth Chamber (VPGC) as part of the 91 day JSC-Lunar/Mars Life Support Test Project Phase III. To meet the wheat nutrient demand at JSC, the KSCB-SAB was operated at both a higher loading rate (35 gdw L-1 compared with 20 gdw L-1) and at a slower retention time (21 days compared with 8 days) than we had used in previous bioreactor (continuous stirred tank reactor - CSTR) studies. The bioreactor operated for 19 weeks-8 weeks startup and steady state stabilization then 11 weeks of operation with the broth harvested weekly. Filtered broth was amended with nutrients and transported to JSC for integration into the VPGC wheat growth component of L/MLSTP Phase III. Biodegradation of JSC wheat residues was a constant 45% during steady state bioreactor operation, and similar to previous B-SAB runs.
Technical Paper

Performance of Salad-Type Plants Using Lighting and Nutrient Delivery Concepts Intended for Spaceflight

1998-07-13
981554
Because of mass and power constraints in spacecraft, plant growth units designed for spaceflight have limited volume and low photosynthetic photon flux (PPF). Sufficient lighting and nutrient delivery are basic challenges to the success of supporting long-term plant growth in space. At the Kennedy Space Center, plant lighting and nutrient delivery hardware currently under NASA-sponsored development are being evaluated to define some of the fundamental issues associated with producing different fresh salad crops. Lettuce crops performed well under all nutrient delivery systems and lighting sources tested. Spinach and radish yields were lower in the presence of zeoponic media (using an ASTROCULTURE™ root tray) relative to plant grown in conventional NFT systems. Within each nutrient delivery system, yields of salad crops under red LEDs + blue light were similar to those crops grown under conventional white light.
Technical Paper

Characterizing the Influence of Temperature and Vacuum Quality on the Desorption Kinetics of Commercial Adsorbents

2008-06-29
2008-01-2096
Understanding the effects of dynamic thermal and vacuum regeneration on VOC desorption kinetics is needed for the development of regenerable trace contaminant control air revitalization systems. The effects of temperature and vacuum quality on the desorption kinetics of ethanol from Carbosieve SIII were examined using 1 hour regeneration cycles. The effect of vacuum quality on ethanol desorption was studied by exposing adsorption tubes loaded with ethanol to low pressures (1.0, 0.5, 0.3, and 0.12 atm) at various thermal regeneration temperatures (160, 100, 70, and 25 °C). At 1 atm of pressure, ethanol removal was found to increase from 2% at 25 °C, to 25% at 70 °C, to 55% at 100 °C, and to 77% at 160 °C. Decreasing the atmospheric pressure from 1 to 0.1 atm for 1 hr did not significantly enhance Carbosieve SIII regeneration at ambient temperatures (25 °C). However, heating the adsorbent at low pressures enhanced its regeneration.
Technical Paper

Characterization of Microbial Contamination in Pretreated Urine Collected from the ISS Urine Processing Assembly during Ground Testing

2009-07-12
2009-01-2421
With the installation of the Water Recovery System (WRS) during mission STS-126 in 2008, the International Space Station (ISS) added the capability to recover clean water for reuse from crewmember urine and atmospheric humidity condensate, including EVA (Extravehicular Activity) wastes. The ability to collect, store and process these waste streams is required to increase potable water recovery and support the ISS crew augmentation planned for 2009. During ground testing of the Urine Processing Assembly (UPA), one of two primary component subsystems that comprise the WRS, significant fouling was repeatedly observed in stored urine pretreated with 0.56% of chromium trioxide and sulfuric acid. During initial observation, presumptive microbiological growth clogged and damaged flight-rated hardware under test as part of a risk-mitigation Flight Experiment (FE).
Technical Paper

Evaluation Of A Passive Water Treatment Device for Contingency Liquid Recovery from Urine for Spacecraft Applications

2009-07-12
2009-01-2488
This report describes ground testing of a commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) water treatment device for contingency recovery of potable liquid from ersatz human urine to support spaceflight testing. The Forward Osmosis Bag (FOB) is a portable, passive water treatment device utilizing osmotic potential to move water across a layered, ultra-filtration membrane to remove pathogens and reject chemical contaminants. The FOB is capable of rejecting ≥90% of the salts, ≥85% of the Total Oxidizable Carbon (TOC), ≥95% of the Total Nitrogen (TN), and ≥93% of Urea-Nitrogen (BUN) in the ersatz urine while completely removing a mixed bacterial population of >108 cells per milliliter.
Technical Paper

Ultraviolet Light Emitting Diodes for Disinfection of Spacecraft Potable Water Systems

2009-07-12
2009-01-2508
This report describes proof-of-concept testing of a commercial-off-the-shelf deep ultraviolet LED for future application as a point-of-use or residual disinfection device for spacecraft potable water systems. The electro-optical performance and disinfection efficacy of a 0.5 mW 265nm UV-C LED (UVTOP, Sensor Electronic Technology, Inc., Columbia, SC) was measured in both static and flow environments against five challenge microorganisms inoculated into potable water at an initial concentration ≥ 108 cells per milliliter. The germicidal irradiation from a single UV-C LED array was sufficient to effect > 4-log kill (> 99.99%) of the challenge bacterial population in < 60 minutes contact time.
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

Development and Molecular Characterization of Microbial Inocula for Initiation of Graywater Waste Processing Systems on Long-Term Space Flights

2003-07-07
2003-01-2512
Microorganisms will be an integral part of biologically based waste processing systems used for water purification or nutrient recycling on space flights. Establishment of these systems with a defined group of microorganisms will provide a standardized means for conferring specific properties to the system. The purpose of this study was to develop microbial inocula (a defined, constructed community and an undefined community) for initiation of plant-based graywater waste processing systems. To this end, small-subunit 16S rDNA sequence analysis was used to describe the population composition of microbial communities from a plant-based graywater waste treatment system and from an industrial wastewater treatment plant (WWTP). The clonal library of organisms from the graywater-degrading rhizosphere community suggested that members of the Cytophagales and Proteobacteria phylogenetic groups dominated. The clonal library of organisms from industrial WWTP was taxonomically more diverse.
Technical Paper

Bacterial and Fungal Communities in BPS Chambers and Root Modules

2003-07-07
2003-01-2528
The PESTO (Photosynthetic Experiment System Testing and Operation) experiment flew in the Biomass Production System (BPS) to International Space Station (ISS) on STS-110 (Atlantis) April 8, 2002, and returned on STS-111 (Endeavour) June 19, 2002, after 73 days in space. The ground control was conducted on a two-week delay at Kennedy Space Center in a BPS unit under environmental conditions comparable to ISS. Wheat (Triticum aestivum cv Apogee) and Brassica rapa cv Astroplant were independently grown in root modules for multiple grow-outs. On-orbit harvests, root modules exchanges and primings, seeds imbibitions, and gas and water samplings occurred at periodic intervals; all were replicated in ground controls. Many operations required crew handling and open access to individual chambers, allowing the exchange of microorganisms between the crew environment and the BPS modules.
Technical Paper

Cabin Air Quality Dynamics On Board the International Space Station

2003-07-07
2003-01-2650
Spacecraft cabin air quality is influenced by a variety of factors. Beyond normal equipment offgassing and crew metabolic loads, the vehicle's operational configuration contributes significantly to overall air quality. Leaks from system equipment and payload facilities, operational status of the atmospheric scrubbing systems, and the introduction of new equipment and modules to the vehicle all influence air quality. The dynamics associated with changes in the International Space Station's (ISS ) configuration since the launch of the U.S. Segment's laboratory module, Destiny, is summarized. Key classes of trace chemical contaminants that are important to crew health and equipment performance are emphasized. The temporary effects associated with attaching each multi-purpose logistics module (MPLM) to the ISS and influence of in-flight air quality on the post-flight ground processing of the MPLM are explored.
Technical Paper

Costs and Benefits of Bioreactors

2002-07-15
2002-01-2523
Different options have been examined for providing minerals to plants for bioregeneration. The baseline option is to ship the minerals. The equivalent system mass of two different bioreactor systems for recycling a portion of these minerals, a fixed-film bioreactor and a stirred-tank reactor are calculated. Either option could reduce the ESM for providing these minerals for a 15-year mission to Mars, with 50% food closure.
Technical Paper

Cleansing Agents for Human Hygiene in Space Travel: Considerations for Biological Processing of Wastewater

2002-07-15
2002-01-2352
A multitude of personal cleaning products, each of which typically contains multiple surfactants, are available for terrestrial use. Selection of surfactant(s) for use in extended space missions should consider, in addition to human comfort and cleansing power, potential impacts on biological processing systems under consideration for such missions. This paper reviews the surfactants present in commercial formulations, their proper nomenclature, and relevant properties such as foaming, biodegradability of organic fractions (both with respect to rate and pathway), presence of inorganic components (e.g., sulphate or counter ions such as sodium), and analytical methods for monitoring their concentrations in waste stream. The background information and results from preliminary testing are used to draw conclusions about the proper approach for selecting surfactants for use in space missions containing biological waste treatment systems.
Technical Paper

Continuous Leaching (Bio)reactor

2002-07-15
2002-01-2350
A continuous leaching device was designed to extract inorganic nutrients from ALS solid wastes for recycling back to hydroponic plant growth systems. The system consists of a conveyor that carries the waste under a water spray. The leacher was used to extract nutrients from hydroponic rice crop residues. The highly aerated and nutrient-rich recirculation liquid supports microbial growth on all surfaces, which leads to biofouling that causes maintenance difficulties. However, it may be better than the standard leaching protocol, as it produces leachate with significantly reduced BOD. This would make it possible to use the leachate from this reactor in hydroponic plant systems without further processing.
Technical Paper

Paecilomyces lilacinus and Fusarium verticillioides Remove t-Butanol from Contaminated Air

2006-07-17
2006-01-2150
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are important indoor air pollutants, particularly in spaces lacking adequate ventilation and containing off gassing materials. The problem is particularly acute in closed environments, such as spacecraft. The best solution to controlling VOC accumulation in closed environments is eliminating the offending chemicals from the spacecraft design. However, when this is not possible, removal of VOCs from spacecraft air is necessary. Two species of fungi, Paecilomyces lilacinus and Fusarium verticillioides, were tested for the ability to remove tert-butanol from air. The fungi were grown on PCA+C agar and placed into jars with high atmospheric concentrations of t-butanol. The concentration of t-butanol was monitored in the containers for one week. The t-butanol consumption rates were estimated after adjusting for leakage. Leak rates ranged from 0.0003 to 0.0027 h-1.
Technical Paper

Planning for the Rapid Aerobic Bioreactor Integration Test (RABIT) at the Kennedy Space Center's Advanced Life Support Breadboard Project

1996-07-01
961509
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) intends to continue the human exploration of outer space. Long duration missions will require the development of reliable regenerative life support processes. The intent of this paper is to define the Kennedy Space Center Controlled Ecological Life Support System (CELSS) research plan for the development and testing of three candidate biological processors for a hybrid biological and physical-chemical waste recycling system. The system would be capable of reclaiming from inedible plant biomass, human metabolic waste, and gray water those components needed for plant growth (carbon dioxide, water, and inorganic salts), while eliminating noxious compounds and maximizing system closure. We will colaborate with AMES Research Center (ARC), Johnson Space Center (JSC), and academia, to design a functional biological-based waste processing system that could be integrated with the planned Human Rated Test Facility (HRTF) at JSC.
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