Fundamental Regolith Properties, Handling and Water Capture (FLEET) UpdateThe FLEET project, begun in FY21, was designed to research several concepts for components and subsystems needed for extracting water from planetary ice deposits. This is one of two approaches for providing water off-Earth for direct use and also for feedstock to manufacture spacecraft propellants. The other approach is to extract lattice-bound water and hydroxyl from the minerals that make up the solid grains of rock and regolith. The ultimate intent is to integrate the findings with other efforts, such as, in the creation of complete water-from-ice production systems for various down-stream uses. The project consists of several elements, now in various stages of completion. They are presented here in the approximate order they would generally be applied to a water-extraction system: Digging icy regolith, transporting it, capturing water vapor, and sealing chambers from the outer environment.
Document ID
20240006861
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Poster
Authors
L Gertsch (Missouri University of Science and Technology Rolla, United States)
J Pierce (Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
B Compton (Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
T Krause (Universities Space Research Association Columbia, United States)
J Stewart (Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
E Rezich (Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
M Proctor (Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
F Thomas (Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
J Mantovani (Kennedy Space Center Merritt Island, Florida, United States)