Two NASA KSC Employees Set for Technology Hall of Fame Induction

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04.05.07

Amber Philman
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468 

RELEASE: 10-07

TWO NASA KSC EMPLOYEES SET FOR TECHNOLOGY HALL OF FAME INDUCTION

Two NASA Kennedy Space Center employees will be inducted into the 
Space Technology Hall of Fame for their award-winning work in 
developing technology that reduces groundwater contamination. The 
ceremony will take place during the 23rd National Space Symposium 
April 9 to 12 in Colorado Springs, Colo.

The inductees include Dr. Jacqueline Quinn, a NASA environmental 
engineer in the Applied Sciences Division at Kennedy Space Center, 
and Kathleen Brooks, a NASA analytical chemist in KSC's Materials 
Science Laboratory.

They will be joined by Drs. Christian Clausen, Cherie Geiger and Debra 
Reinhart from the University of Central Florida's Departments of 
Chemistry and Civil and Environmental Engineering, who helped to 
develop Emulsified Zero-Valent Iron, or EZVI.

"It was an unexpected honor to be recognized by such a prestigious 
institution as the Space Foundation," which conducts the Hall of Fame 
in cooperation with NASA, Quinn said. "While the direct applications 
to spaceflight are not obvious, this technology will have a direct 
benefit as we transition from current space flight programs to new 
programs supporting the exploration of the moon and beyond. This 
offers an innovative way of cleaning up our current facilities and 
enabling us to use them for the future."

The EZVI technology won NASA's Government Invention of the Year and 
Commercial Invention of the Year for 2005. KSC inventors have 
accomplished this feat twice in the past three years.

The group also received a 2006 Award for Excellence in Technology 
Transfer from the Federal Laboratory Consortium for Technology 
Transfer. This award recognizes laboratory employees who have 
accomplished outstanding work in the process of transferring a 
technology developed by a federal laboratory to the commercial 
marketplace.

EZVI is one of the few methods available that can treat the dense 
nonaqueous phase liquids, or DNAPL source. DNAPLs are liquids that 
are denser than water and do not dissolve or mix easily in water. 
Benefits of this technology include requiring less treatment time, 
reducing treatment costs, producing less toxic and more easily 
degradable byproducts, and the product is safe for the environment.

During the Apollo space program years, rocket engine parts were 
cleaned with chlorinated solvents which are heavier than water. As 
the liquids sank into the ground, it was later discovered they could 
become harmful to the aquifer, which is often a source of drinking 
water.

In 1999, the research team began working on a concept to treat DNAPLs 
found at Launch Complex 34 at the Cape Canaveral Spaceport. The 
project was initially funded by NASA's Small Business Technology 
Transfer programs and the Environmental Compliance and Restoration 
Program. Quinn teamed with researchers at UCF in 2000 to conduct the 
first phase of the research and development of EZVI. During phase 
two, the first field demonstration was performed in 2002 at Launch 
Complex 34 under the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Superfund 
Innovative Technology Evaluation Program.

GeoSyntec, an environmental consultant to NASA, participated in the 
first field demonstration of EZVI as the university's small business 
collaborator. Since then, NASA has licensed EZVI to six companies 
that are producing their own versions of the technology, including 
the first company, Toxicological and Environmental Associates in 
Baton Rouge, La.

The technology was field tested by the U.S. Department of Defense at 
additional locations. It has also been used in both government and 
private industry in Arkansas, Illinois, Tennessee, New Jersey and 
Florida, and by other government agencies.

Quinn said the EZVI technology also treats metal contaminates, making 
the technology even more globally applicable. The team recently was 
granted another patent for "Contaminate Removal from Natural 
Resources," which addresses EZVI's use on metal contamination.

The Space Technology Hall of Fame enters its 19th year of honoring 
those who quietly transform technology originally developed to 
support space exploration initiatives into products that help improve 
the quality of life on Earth.

For more information on the Space Technology Hall of Fame, visit:

http://www.SpaceTechHallofFame.org

	
-end-



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