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Making oxygen from lunar regolith....

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docm

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PhysOrg article....

Scientists Make Oxygen Out of Moon Rock

August 11th, 2009 by Lisa Zyga

(PhysOrg.com) -- If humans ever create a lunar base, one of the biggest challenges will be figuring out how to breathe. Transporting oxygen to the moon is extremely expensive, so for the past several years NASA has been looking into other possibilities. One idea is extracting oxygen from moon rock.

Recently, Derek Fray, a materials chemist from the University of Cambridge, and his colleagues have built a reactor that uses oxides in Moon rocks as the cathode in an electrochemical process to produce oxygen.

The design is based on a process that the researchers invented in 2000 that produces carbon dioxide. In this design, the scientists pass a current between the cathode and an anode made of carbon, with both electrodes sitting in an electrolyte solution of molten calcium chloride, a common salt. The current removes oxygen atoms from the cathode, which are then ionized and dissolve in the molten salt. The negatively charged oxygen is attracted to the carbon anode, where it erodes the anode and produces carbon dioxide.

To produce oxygen rather than carbon dioxide, the researchers made an unreactive anode using a mixture of calcium titanate and calcium ruthenate instead of the carbon. Because this anode barely erodes, the reaction between the oxygen ions and anode produces oxygen.

Based on experiments with a simulated lunar rock developed by NASA, the researchers calculate that three one-meter-tall reactors could generate one tonne of oxygen per year on the Moon. Each tonne of oxygen would require three tonnes of rock to produce. Fray noted that three reactors would require about 4.5 kilowatts of power, which could be supplied by solar panels or possibly a small nuclear reactor on the Moon. The researchers are also working with the European Space Agency on developing an even larger reactor that could be operated remotely.
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neuvik

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They claim the device uses 4.5 kilowatts to run, but does that include crushing the rocks to a granular form? Assuming the article is completely serious about using rocks, and not the loose dust type of regolith.

Cool article, hope the target rock they need is in abundance.
 
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access

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How i understand it there are only a few types of rocks on the moon and i trust that they have used one that will be possible. Also isn't there a prize out for making oxygen from regolith?
 
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neutrino78x

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Interesting, however, did not discover a high probability of there being ice at the poles? Assuming the ice is there, it would be easier to get oxygen from the ice...

--Brian
 
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docm

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Presuming your mission is to the pole, fine and good. What if your mission is in the mid latitudes or equatorial? No Space 1999 Eagles around, yet, so you use what's available.
 
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