全重力纳米光子加热和leidenfrost驱动的水回收系统

Rawand M Rasheed, Evan Thomas, P. Gardner, Tanya Rogers, R. Verduzco, M. Weislogel
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引用次数: 1

摘要

航天器上的回收系统目前只能从尿液中回收大约80%的水。为了解决与气味、污染和微重力流体流动现象相关的挑战,目前的系统使用有毒的预处理化学品、过滤器和旋转分离器。本文通过结合被动液气分离、纳米光子巴氏灭菌和非接触式莱顿弗罗斯特液滴蒸馏,开发了一种半被动、无潜在污染物和无生物污垢的航天器尿液处理方法。该系统的目标是在零重力、月球、火星和地球重力环境下,从废水流中回收98%的水。相分离器表面涂有炭黑纳米颗粒,通过红外发光二极管(led)照射,在尿液收集、分离和储存过程中产生超局部加热和巴氏杀菌。按照规定的流速和时间,将尿液引入加热的8.5米长的螺旋半圆形铝制轨道。轨道的低间距和高温相结合,建立了弱重力驱动的非接触式莱顿弗罗斯特液滴蒸馏条件。在我们的技术演示中,我们成功地从盐水原料中回收了无盐馏分物和浓盐水。我们估计了该方法的等效系统质量指标,这与目前国际空间站上的水回收系统相比是有利的。
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Omni-Gravity Nanophotonic Heating and Leidenfrost-Driven Water Recovery System
Abstract Recycling systems aboard spacecraft are currently limited to approximately 80% water recovery from urine. To address challenges associated with odors, contamination, and microgravity fluid flow phenomena, current systems use toxic pretreatment chemicals, filters, and rotary separators. Herein, a semipassive and potentially contaminant- and biofouling-free approach to spacecraft urine processing is developed by combining passive liquid–gas separation, nanophotonic pasteurization, and noncontact Leidenfrost droplet distillation. The system aims to achieve >98% water recovery from wastewater streams in zero, Lunar, Martian, and terrestrial gravitational environments. The surfaces of the phase separator are coated with carbon black nanoparticles that are irradiated by infrared light-emitting diodes (LEDs) producing hyperlocal heating and pasteurization during urine collection, separation, and storage. For the prescribed flow rate and timeline, the urine is then introduced into a heated 8.5-m-long helical hemicircular aluminum track. The low pitch and the high temperature of the track combine to establish weakly gravity-driven noncontact Leidenfrost droplet distillation conditions. In our technology demonstrations, salt-free distillate and concentrated brine are successfully recovered from saltwater feed stocks. We estimate equivalent system mass metrics for the approach, which compare favorably to the current water recovery system aboard the International Space Station.
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