Datasets / Distillation Brine Purification for Resource Recovery Applications Project


Distillation Brine Purification for Resource Recovery Applications Project

Published By National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Issued almost 10 years ago

US
beta

Summary

Type of release
a one-off release of a single dataset

Data Licence
Not Applicable

Content Licence
Creative Commons CCZero

Verification
automatically awarded

Description

<p>Water comprises the majority of the daily mass requirements for crewed space missions. Used for drinking, food prep, or hygiene, water is one of the most critical life support elements. Reliable water recovery is paramount for long term space exploration either on the International Space Station (ISS) or beyond Earth’s gravity well. Advances in water recovery have allowed longer mission durations and decreased launch costs. In order to visit or even habituate extraterrestrial bodies (Mars, Europa) further advances in water recovery are needed.</p><p>Current environmental control and life support systems on the ISS are focused on air and water recovery. Wastewater is pretreated with chromic acid and then distilled. The pretreatment turns about 10% to 30% of the wastewater into unusable brine and makes further water recovery difficult. In addition, no chemicals are retrieved for reuse from the brine. If the wastewater were treated in bioreactors and then distilled or filtered, chemical pretreatment would not be needed and the remaining brine could serve as a resource for chemical and further water recovery.</p><p>Development and application of brine tolerant ion-exchange resins could provide more efficient methods for retrieving elements and pure water from salt water, and provide feed stocks for commercial processes that generate bleach, HCl, and Na/KOH (e.g., Chlor-alkalai Process). If proven feasible, the combined benefits would reduce consumables and further close the water loop for future space exploration. and generate consumable chemicals, such as HCl, NaOH , KOH and sodium hypochlorite (bleach). </p>