International Space Station Water System Successfully Activated

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Oct. 26, 2010

Michael Curie 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-1100 
michael.curie@xxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 10-275

INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION WATER SYSTEM SUCCESSFULLY ACTIVATED

WASHINGTON -- NASA has announced the successful activation of new 
hardware that will support water production services aboard the 
International Space Station. 

The Sabatier system can create up to 530 gallons of water per year 
from byproducts of the station's Oxygen Generation System and Carbon 
Dioxide Removal Assembly. The process is named for Paul Sabatier, a 
1912 Nobel Prize winner in chemistry. 

"This is an important step forward in NASA's commercialization 
endeavors and shows how successful private industry can be at 
providing solutions on its own," said Bill Gerstenmaier, NASA 
associate administrator for Space Operations at the agency's 
Headquarters in Washington. "The ability to produce this water will 
be important for sustaining space station operations once the shuttle 
is retired." 

The system was integrated into the space station's Water Recovery 
System during the week of Oct. 11. Activation, checkout and first use 
of the system were completed Oct. 22, running for over eight hours. 

The Sabatier process uses a nickel catalyst to interact with hydrogen 
and carbon dioxide at elevated temperatures and pressures to produce 
water and methane. The water is retained for recycling processes, and 
the methane is vented outside of the space station. 
Prior to adding the Sabatier system, hydrogen produced while 
generating station oxygen was considered waste gas and vented 
overboard. Carbon dioxide generated by crew metabolism also was 
vented overboard. With the Sabatier system, these two former waste 
gases will generate a valuable product for the space station: water. 

Under contract to NASA, Hamilton Sundstrand supplied the flight 
hardware and operational support for a Sabatier-reaction-based system 
that operates as part of the station's Environmental Control and Life 
Support System. This contract is unique because NASA did not 
participate in design reviews or impose any specifications on the 
design, except for those defined in the safety, interface and 
acceptance requirements met by Hamilton Sundstrand. 

The company developed, procured, and built the flight hardware and 
support equipment needed for operations and training. The in-orbit 
operational portion of the contract runs until Sept. 30, 2014. 

For information about the International Space Station, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/station 

	
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