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Integrated Waste Trade Study: Lunar Surface to Deep Space The Logistics Reduction Project is one of NASA's technology development projects that is preparing humanity for deep space missions. Reducing the mass and volume of logistical supplies that must be carried from Earth to support the missions and their crews is the primary goal of the project. Effective ways to achieve this goal include reducing, reusing, or recycling wastes generated throughout the mission. Due to the goal of the project, waste processing technologies were analyzed for Lunar surface missions at various lengths and an 850-day Mars transit mission to evaluate the potential benefits of waste processing pertaining to each mission. The technologies assessed include trash compaction, trash-to-gas and human metabolic waste processing technologies, integrated with the baseline architectures of each mission’s habitat. The fully integrated systems were analyzed using an equivalent system mass, which is a metric that encompasses the mass, volume, power and cooling of a system, resulting in an estimate of launch mass and serving as a proxy for cost. Each system’s equivalent system mass was compared to that of the baseline waste processing system of the respective habitat, hand compaction with storage for Lunar surface missions and hand compaction with jettisoning for Mars transit, to evaluate whether the traded waste processing technology was beneficial. This analysis identifies a general trend that more sophisticated waste processing can be beneficial depending on the mission duration. For Lunar surface missions, the water recovery from waste processing can pay off over consecutive missions, due to offsetting the losses from the system via extravehicular activities. In contrast for Mars transit, the primary objective is mass removal from the spacecraft, so technologies like trash-to-gas are competitive with the baseline. Furthermore, the technologies which can recover resources from waste, such as water, may present additional advantages to an ever-changing Mars mission architecture.
Document ID
20240007391
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Emily Rini
(Jacobs (United States) Dallas, Texas, United States)
Mike Ewert
(Johnson Space Center Houston, Texas, United States)
Thomas Chen
(Johnson Space Center Houston, Texas, United States)
Date Acquired
June 10, 2024
Subject Category
Man/System Technology and Life Support
Aeronautics (General)
Meeting Information
Meeting: 53rd International Conference on Environmental Systems (ICES)
Location: Louisville, KY
Country: US
Start Date: July 21, 2024
End Date: July 25, 2024
Sponsors: Leidos (United States)
Funding Number(s)
TASK: 265
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80JSC022DA035
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
Waste processing
Compaction technologies
Trash-to-Gas
Logistics
Logistics Reduction

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