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Technical Paper

Testing the European Modular Cultivation System (EMCS) for ISS Plant and Cell Research

2005-07-11
2005-01-2841
For experiments with plants and other organisms in microgravity, a facility with a life support and an observation system, both of them operating by remote control on a centrifuge rotor, is deemed necessary. This would enable the scientist on ground to study development and behavior of organisms under microgravity and different acceleration conditions in Space, also with the possibility of a permanent on-board 1-g control. ESA’s EMCS (European Modular Cultivation System) has been designed for these kinds of experiments, especially for long lasting plant cultivations from seed-to-seed. However, the experiment preparation, the design and testing of the experiment hardware and the ground reference need to be done in a ground model that accommodates all features of the flight model, but is adapted to the gravity conditions on ground. This model, called the ERM (Experiment Reference Model), was delivered to ESA in 2002 and has been submitted to extensive testing.
Technical Paper

Temperature and Humidity Control by Means of a Membrane Based Condensing Heat Exchanger (MCHX)

2003-07-07
2003-01-2628
Temperature and humidity control are vital functions of an environmental control and life support system in a manned spacecraft. A MCHX Technology Demonstrator has been developed using hollow fiber membranes to remove heat and water vapor from the cabin air. The functional principle of the MCHX is based on micro porous hydrophobic hollow fiber membranes. Heat and water vapor are transferred through the membrane to the cooling the water. The water vapor will condense at the cooling water side. The technique promises a good alternative for the conventional noisy and power-consuming rotary condensate separator. This paper describes the MCHX development work including the rational for its concept, the module design and its performance data as a result of numerical predictions and a test campaign. The MCHX performance requirements are linked to those of the Columbus Laboratory, the European contribution to the International Space Station (ISS).
Technical Paper

Space Plant Research on the ISS with the European Modular Cultivation System and with BIOLAB

2000-07-10
2000-01-2472
Two ESA facilities will be available for plant research and other biological experiments on the International Space Station: the European Modular Cultivation System (EMCS) in the US “Destiny” Module and BIOLAB in the European “Columbus” Laboratory. Both facilities use standard experiment containers, mounted on centrifuges and connected to life support systems, allowing telescience-controlled acceleration studies (0.001×g up to 2.0×g) and continuation of microgravity research on protoplasts, callus cultures, algae, fungi and seedlings, as earlier flown on Biorack, and new experiments with larger specimens of fungi, mosses and vascular plants.
Technical Paper

Phases Management for Advanced Life Support Processes

2005-07-11
2005-01-2767
For a planetary base, a reliable life support system including food and water supply, gas generation and waste management is a condition sine qua non. While for a short-term period the life support system may be an open loop, i.e. water, gases and food provided from the Earth, for long-term missions the system has to become more and more regenerative. Advanced life support systems with biological regenerative processes have been studied for many years and the processes within the different compartments are rather complete and known to a certain extent. The knowledge of the associated interfaces, the management of the input and output phases: liquid, solid, gas, between compartments, has been limited. Nowadays, it is well accepted that the management of these phases induces generic problems like capture, separation, transfer, mixing, and buffering. A first ESA study on these subjects started mid 2003.
Technical Paper

MELISSA: Current Status and Future Development Program

1993-07-01
932126
The MELISSA (Microbial Ecological LIfe Support System Alternative) project has been set up to be a model for the studies on ecological life support systems for long term space missions. The compartmentalisation of the loop, the choice of the micro-organisms and the axenic conditions have been selected in order to simplify the behaviour of this artificial ecosystem and allow a deterministic and engineering approach. In this framework the MELISSA project has now been running since beginning 1989. In this paper we present the general approach of the study, the scientific results obtained on each independent compartment (mass balance, growth kinetics, limitations, compound conversions,..), the tests of toxicity already performed between some compartments and their effect on the growth kinetics. The technical results on instrumentation and control aspects, and the current status of the ESA/ESTEC hardware are also reviewed.
Technical Paper

FOOD: Fungus on Orbit Demonstration

2000-07-10
2000-01-2382
If man leaves Earth for a long time to settlements on the Moon or Mars, he will be dependent of Closed Ecological Life Support Systems (CELSS) for the recycling of waste and the production of food. A large amount of the inedible plant material has to be pretreated and converted into a form which can be recycled. The main portion of this biomass is lignocellulosic material which cannot or only slightly be degraded by micro-organisms. White-rot fungi like Pleurotus spp. (oyster mushroom) or Lentinus edodes (shiitake or black Chinese mushroom) degrade these fibrous material more efficient than other micro-organisms and produce edible and also tasteful mushrooms which will increase the quality and nutritional value of the settlers diet. In the MELISSA (Micro-Ecological Life Support Alternative) project, a project under the management of ESA to study CELLS, it was observed that also human faeces contain a considerable amount of fibrous materials which pile in the loop.
Technical Paper

DOMEX-2 Thermal Design, Testing and Commissioning in Support to the SMOS Mission

2009-07-12
2009-01-2375
In recent years there is growing interest, on the part of the remote sensing community, in using the Antarctic area, for calibrating and validating data of satellite-borne microwave radiometers. With a view to the launching of the ESA's SMOS satellite, which is a satellite designed to observe soil moisture over the Earth landmasses, salinity over the oceans and to provide observations over regions of ice and snow, an experimental activity called DOMEX was started at Dome-C Antarctica. The main scientific objectives of this activity are to provide microwave data for SMOS satellite calibration and in particular: the continuous acquisition of a calibrated time-series of microwave and thermal Infrared (8-14micron) emission over an entire Austral annual cycle, the acquisition of a long time-series of snow measurements and the acquisition of relevant local atmospheric measurements from the local weather station. This paper is focusing on the thermal design, analysis and testing of Domex-2.
Technical Paper

Application of EcosimPro to Bio-regenerative Life Support Components

2003-07-07
2003-01-2410
EcosimPro‘s capability to solve a problem domain that can be represented by Differential-Algebraic Equations (DAE) and discrete events, make it particularly attractive to model bio-regenerative life support systems. Components of the envisaged MELiSSA bio-regenerative life support system are driven by the adaptation of the biomass to changing environmental conditions, which could be of continuous nature, such as depletion or replenishment of nutrition, and discrete events, such as step changes in light fluxes and control interactions. The authors first present simulation results for a closed and an open loop bio-regenerative system. The simulations include the establishment of a quasi-steady state, reaction to step changes including a mass balance check, and the simulation of a controlled bioreactor. The results demonstrate the capability of this tool to model components of a bio-regenerative life support system, as well as an entire bio-regenerative life support system in the future.
Technical Paper

An Experimental Model of a Biological Life Support System with the Intra-system Mass Exchange Closed to a High Degree, Based on “Biological Combustion” of Dead-end Plant Residues

2003-07-07
2003-01-2417
This work concerns the model of a biological life support system consisting of higher plants, a unit of “biological combustion”, a physicochemical reactor, and 1/30 of a human. The cycling of the main biogenic elements of the system, water, and carbon dioxide was closed to a high degree (more than 95%). Experimental-theoretical analysis of the cycling processes in the system was based on the calculations of mass exchange rates dynamics and some stoichiometric equations. The model was designed for the study of mechanisms of material transformation and the directions of mass exchange processes in the artificial ecosystems.
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