New NASA System Will Help Space Station Crews Breathe Easier

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July 17, 2007

Allard Beutel
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-4769

Lynnette Madison
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-483-5111

Jennifer Morcone
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
256-544-0034

RELEASE: 07-157

NEW NASA SYSTEM WILL HELP SPACE STATION CREWS BREATHE EASIER

A new oxygen generation system tested between July 11 and 14 aboard 
the International Space Station will allow the orbiting laboratory's 
crew size to increase in 2009.

The hardware is part of the station's environmental control and life 
support system and will be used to augment the Russian Elektron 
oxygen generator. With the increased capability to produce oxygen, 
the station can better support six crew members as they work and live 
aboard the outpost. The station currently supports a three-person 
crew.

During normal operations, the new system will generate about 12 pounds 
of oxygen per day, enough for six people. However, it can provide as 
much as 20 pounds of oxygen per day, enough for as many as 11 people. 
It is designed to replace oxygen consumed through breathing or lost 
during experiment use and airlock depressurization. During last 
week's test, which started Wednesday and ended Saturday, the system 
generated approximately 10 pounds of oxygen.

"The successful activation and operation of this new system during its 
test run is an important step toward establishing a truly 
international space station," said Mike Suffredini, manager of the 
space station program. "With this system's oxygen-generating 
capacity, we can expand the station's crew, providing more 
opportunities for our partner countries and unlocking more 
possibilities for research that will open new pathways for future 
exploration."

The 1,800-pound, refrigerator-sized component was delivered on space 
shuttle Discovery's STS-116 mission in December 2006 and installed in 
the space station's Destiny laboratory. Since then, several elements 
of hardware and software have been added to the station to support 
the new system's operation. The last required part, a hydrogen vent 
valve, was installed during a spacewalk on space shuttle Atlantis' 
STS-117 mission in June.

Work performed by space station Expedition 15 Flight Engineer Clayton 
Anderson and software updates to U.S. computers earlier in July 
completed preparations for the system's activation and operation.

The new system produces oxygen by tapping into the station's water 
supply. Through the process of electrolysis, it splits the water into 
hydrogen and oxygen molecules. The oxygen is delivered into the crew 
cabin, while the hydrogen is vented overboard through the hydrogen 
vent valve. In the future, NASA engineers will recycle the hydrogen 
for water production from carbon dioxide.

Currently, oxygen on the station comes from four sources: the 
Russian-built Elektron system, Russian supply vehicles, storage tanks 
in the U.S. Quest airlock and solid fuel oxygen generators called 
candles.

The new oxygen generation system in the U.S. Destiny laboratory is one 
of two primary components in the station's regenerative environmental 
control and life support system. The other component, the water 
recovery system, is planned to be installed on the space station in 
2008. Periodically, NASA will activate and operate the new oxygen 
generator to ensure the system remains ready for its integration with 
the water recovery system. 

The two new systems were to be included in the space station's Node 3 
module, targeted for launch in 2010. However, mission managers 
decided to launch them earlier as part of a strategy to increase the 
station's crew to six people in 2009.

The oxygen generation system was designed and tested at NASA's 
Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and Hamilton 
Sundstrand Space Systems International in Windsor Locks, Conn. The 
Boeing Co. of Chicago provided laboratory integration, including the 
development of mechanical equipment, electrical equipment and 
computer software.

For more information about the International Space Station, its crew 
members and their missions, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/station

	
-end-



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