Oxygen is such an abundant resource on Earth that we rarely think about it unless we get locked in a cupboard. However, for space engineers, the question of how to get enough of the vital gas is constant, frustrating problem. To help future explorers of the Red Planet get enough oxygen for life support and powering spacecraft, NASA has included MIT’s MOXIE experiment on the Mars 2020 mission to study how to make oxygen out of the Martian atmosphere.
Sending a manned mission to Mars not only involves technical problems far beyond anything previously attempted, but also logistical problems equivalent to that of a small war stretched across a hundred million miles of space. Many tons of spares, food, water, fuel, and oxygen would need to be transported to keep the astronauts alive and many times more fuel would be needed to transport it all.
Previously, this wasn't as great a problem. When the Apollo astronauts landed on the Moon, they carried everything they needed for their journey. On Mars, that may not be practical unless you want a spacecraft the size of a small aircraft carrier. Instead, scientists and engineers are exploring ways that future missions could live off the land when they arrive on the Red Planet.
"When we send humans to Mars, we will want them to return safely, and to do that they need a rocket to lift off the planet’” says Michael Hecht of MIT's Haystack Observatory. “That’s one of the largest pieces of the mass budget that we would need to send astronauts there and back. So if we can eliminate that piece by making the oxygen on Mars, we’re way ahead of the game."
MIT’s Mars OXygen In situ resource utilization Experiment (MOXIE) is one possible answer. Developed in partnership with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, it’s based on the fact that the Martian atmosphere, though extremely thin, is composed of 96 percent carbon dioxide, which means its a vast potential source of oxygen for future explorers and settlers. Essentially, MOXIE is a fuel cell in reverse. Instead of generating electricity by using oxygen to burn a fuel, it uses a process called solid oxide electrolysis , where electricity is employed to split carbon dioxide into oxygen and carbon monoxide.
This process would see Martian air pumped into the unit through a dust filter and pressurized before being passed into a fuel cell. At high temperatures, some ceramic oxides act as oxygen ion conductors. In the fuel cell, a thin, non-porous disc of this ceramic separates two porous electrodes. One electrode acts as the cathode and the other as the anode. Carbon dioxide passes through the cathode and when it comes into contact with the ceramic, the interaction of electricity and the ceramic causes the carbon dioxide to split into oxygen and carbon monoxide. The oxygen and the carbon monoxide are then separated and the oxygen stored.
MOXIE is one of seven major experiments be flown on the US$1.9 billion Mars 2020 mission, which is scheduled to fly in July 2020. Based on the nuclear-powered Curiosity rover currently exploring the Gale Crater region of the planet. The other instruments are intended to study Mars, but MOXIE stands out because it’s more of a practical experiment.
"If you were one of those astronauts depending on an oxygen tank for your ride home, I think you’d like to see it tested on Mars before you go," says Hecht. "We want to invest in a simple prototype before we are convinced. We've never run a factory on Mars. But this is what we’re doing; we’re running a prototype factory to see what problems we might come up against."
According to MIT, if MOXIE is successful, a scaled up version could be of great help to future explorers in providing oxygen for breathing and fuel. One scenario could see a nuclear-powered robotic plant sent ahead to produce and stockpile oxygen ready to be used when astronauts arrive.
Source: MIT
Or does Nasa just think Mars One is a big marketing scam? Or what? It's beginning to seem a bit bizarre. MW
2. The author suggests to fly to Mars would require a space ship about the size of a small aircraft carrier to just carry the supplies (food, water, oxygen, fuel, etcetera). I am not sure of the size of such a ship but it is extremely big. I question those requirements save for fuel. As the Russian cosmonauts proved you can reuse virtually everything except fuel. Grow food on the ship, use urine and feces for fertilizer and replacement nutrients, filter urine for water, etcetera. What I do see needing to be carried is a supplies for when Mars is reached and major construction materials and equipment. So yes, a dreadnaught sized space ship might still be needed. This dreadnaught will have to be constructed in space as there are no known form of boosters possible to perform a launch of a 27000 ton (very small carrier Juan Carlos I (L61)) payload.
3. Before any hope of long term human habitation on Mars can exist, there must be permanent structures including a structure to provide more air. While the structure might be sealed and resources reusable, I would hope if we are to spend expand the facility, mine resources, develop some form of agriculture, ... Every time the inhabitants leave the structure, they would release some of their internal air, and that must be replaced. Unless the "settlers" can form perfect seals with the ground and expansion is strictly underground, this will remain a critical danger.
4. I would therefore expect at extreme minimum 20-30 year construction project for the dreadnaught based on how fast the international space station is being built. Further allowing regular shuttles to and from Mars with landing craft capable of delivering sealed buildings, construction and mining equipment, soil, water, oxygen collection and storage devices, smelting, mold making and machining equipment, a small mountain of metals including copper, gold, silver, aluminum, ... ... iron, and several grades of steel to build the anything discovered needed not transported. True, the ship could be a source of many of these but then do we want to have to keep building new ships.
5. Before any form of permanent settlement can be established a space port of size sufficient for landing, refueling, and launching must be built. I am assuming that the settlers will not be sent their with no hope of producing output that is usable here on earth. The only reason to send only one way is to establish a permanent extra location for man in the event of a extinction event on earth. If that is the hope, a lot more will need to be sent to Mars in support of the colony. Further the colony size must be much larger, preferably at least 100 fertile mated pairs.
You can use the water as is (well, filtered) for drinking, and when split into oxygen/hydrogen can be used for breathing and combined with the hydrogen to power rockets. The hydrogen could also be used in fuel cells for powering various equipment and vehicles.
Also, another group has already tested a device (here on earth in a simulated Martian atmosphere) that could convert the atmosphere into a fuel. I believe it was methane.