Exhaling for Exploration: Scientists Test Lunar Breathing System

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May 7, 2008

Stephanie Schierholz/Grey Hautaluoma
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-4997/0668
stephanie.schierholz@xxxxxxxx, grey.hautaluoma-1@xxxxxxxx

Lynnette Madison/Josh Byerly
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-483-5111
lynnette.b.madison@xxxxxxxx, bill.j.byerly@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 08-115

EXHALING FOR EXPLORATION: SCIENTISTS TEST LUNAR BREATHING SYSTEM

HOUSTON -- Imagine yourself hip-to-hip, shoulder-to-shoulder, inside a 
room the size of a walk-in closet for eight hours with five people 
you just met. Does that make you sweat? Or maybe make your breathing 
a little more animated?

For three weeks, 23 volunteers dedicated time to do just that -- sweat 
and breathe -- inside a test chamber so NASA scientists at Johnson 
Space Center in Houston could measure the amount of moisture and 
carbon dioxide absorbed by a new system being developed for future 
space vehicles. The system is designed to control carbon dioxide and 
humidity inside a crew capsule to make air breathable and living 
space more comfortable.

The tests, which took place from April 14 to May 1, are some of the 
first to use human subjects in support of NASA's Orion crew capsule, 
Altair lunar lander and lunar rovers. 

"We're moving from paper studies to tests with hardware that will 
evolve and become part of the spacecraft that will fly back to the 
moon," said test volunteer and NASA engineer Evan Thomas at Johnson.

Known as the Carbon-dioxide and Moisture Removal Amine Swing-bed, or 
CAMRAS, the Exploration Life Support project within NASA's 
Exploration Technology Development Program is developing the new 
system. The program is investigating technologies that will help 
sustain life on exploration vehicles and reduce the dependence on 
resupply from Earth.

"Our goal for CAMRAS is to develop a simple, regenerative, lightweight 
device that will work for both the Orion crew capsule and the Altair 
lunar lander," said lead researcher Jeff Sweterlitsch.

Testing on the device began more than a year ago with machines used to 
create humidity and carbon dioxide in the test chamber. The tests 
proved the system worked well, but the machines could not generate 
the wide variety of metabolic loads -- amounts of energy the body's 
chemical reactions produce to maintain life -- that humans create. 

This series of tests put volunteers inside a test chamber scaled to be 
the size of the Orion crew capsule, about 570 cubic feet. The 
volunteers, who were selected and grouped to replicate a typical 
crew, were asked to sleep, eat and exercise during test sessions that 
lasted from a few hours to overnight.

"The air smelled a little artificial, like on a plane, and it was a 
little crowded," said Aaron Hetherington, one of the volunteers and a 
director for the test. "But the air was fine; the temperature 
comfortable. My biggest observation is that it was unremarkable, 
which is good because that means the hardware was working."

Two additional phases of testing on CAMRAS are planned.

The CAMRAS absorption beds are regenerated by the vacuum of space, and 
processing the carbon dioxide and moisture requires little energy. 
CAMRAS uses an organic compound known as amine that absorbs the 
carbon dioxide and water vapor from the cabin's atmosphere. The 
system then vents the two waste products overboard, and the vacuum of 
space regenerates the amine to work again. 

The Exploration Life Support project also is developing technologies 
that will recover oxygen and water vapor, recycle spacecraft 
wastewater into drinking water and recover usable resources from 
wastes. 

Video of the final test will be available on NASA Television's Video 
File. For NASA TV downlink, schedule and streaming video information, 
visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv

For photos from the test and more information about NASA's 
Constellation Program, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/constellation

	
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