Abstract
In the International Space Station (ISS), Russian and European cosmonauts drink water disinfected by dissolved silver. For this to be effective, the concentration of silver should remain above a certain threshold from the moment of its initial disposition in storage tanks on earth until its final consumption in ISS. Unfortunately, during water tanks transportation to ISS and during storage in ISS, silver concentration has been reported to decrease intensively beyond any reason. This work examines the effect of different materials used in ISS water storage and distribution systems on the reduction of silver concentration. An experimental campaign has been organized where passivated stainless steel (SS), passivated and electropolished SS and titanium alloy coupons (official ISS grades) are exposed to simulated ISS potable water at different silver concentrations, different surface to volume ratios, and at stagnant or flow conditions. The evolution of silver concentration remaining in the bulk water is recorded with respect to the exposure time. A reaction engineering model for the Ag loss to the coupons is developed. The model is fitted to the experimental data in order to derive the reaction rate expression and the corresponding parameters. For passivated SS and electropolished SS the silver deposition rate depends on the initial silver concentration in water but is rather unaffected by the progress of silver deposition on the surface. On the other hand, for Ti alloy, while silver deposition rate still depends on initial silver concentration, it decreases continuously as silver deposition on the surface advances, implying that Ti alloy surface becomes gradually saturated and so prevents further silver deposition. Such a model can be useful for material selection and design of water storage and distribution facilities for ISS.
Highlights
Potable water is, after oxygen, the second consumable necessary for crew members to live aboard a spacecraft and by far, the most critical with regards to mass
Nitrogen headspace is used during potable initial silver concentration and surface over volume ratio (S/V) ratio
Nitrogen headspace is used during potable water preparation and treatment on the ground, with an initial silver concentration of 0.5 mg/L
Summary
After oxygen, the second consumable necessary for crew members to live aboard a spacecraft and by far, the most critical with regards to mass. This is a major concern of crew members in the International Space Station but the situation will be far more severe in future deep space manned missions [1,2]. The major differences between the two types of water are summarized as follows: the disinfection agent is silver for the Russian type of water and iodine for the US type of water, the TOC maximum
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