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Achieving and documenting closure in plant growth facilitiesAs NASA proceeds with its effort to develop a Controlled Ecological Life Support System (CELSS) that will provide life support to crews during long duration space missions, it must address the question of facility and system closure. The concept of closure as it pertains to CELSS and engineering specifications, construction problems and monitoring procedures used in the development and operation of a closed plant growth facility for the CELSS program are described. A plant growth facility is one of several modules required for a CELSS. A prototype of this module at Kennedy Space Center is the large (7m tall x 3.5m diameter) Biomass Production Chamber (BPC), the central facility of the CELSS Breadboard Project. The BPC is atmospherically sealed to a leak rate of approximately 5 percent of its total volume per 24 hours. This paper will discuss the requirements for atmospheric closure in the facility, present CO2 and trace gas data from initial tests of the BPC with and without plants, and describe how the chamber was sealed atmospherically. Implications that research conducted in this type of facility will have for the CELSS program are discussed.
Document ID
19920038359
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Knott, W. M.
(NASA John F. Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Sager, John C.
(NASA John F. Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Wheeler, Ray
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Date Acquired
August 15, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1992
Publication Information
Publication: Advances in Space Research
Volume: 12
Issue: 5, 19
ISSN: 0273-1177
Subject Category
Man/System Technology And Life Support
Accession Number
92A20983
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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