Scale-up of the Carbon Dioxide Removal by Ionic Liquid Sorbent (CDRILS) System
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The Carbon Dioxide Removal by Ionic Liquid Sorbent (CDRILS) system is designed for efficient, safe and reliable carbon dioxide (CO2) removal from cabin air on long-duration missions to the Moon, deep space, and Mars. CDRILS integrates an ionic liquid sorbent with hollow fiber membrane contactors for rapid CO2 removal and recovery. The liquid-based system provides continuous CO2 delivery, which avoids complicated valve networks to switch between absorbing and desorbing beds and enables simpler integration to the Sabatier without the need for the CO2 Management System (CMS). Ionic liquids are particularly desirable as liquid absorbents for space applications since they are non-volatile, non-odorous, and have high oxidative stability. The hollow fiber membrane contactors offer both high contact area and rigorous containment between the gas and liquid phases in a microgravity environment.
Scale-up of the CDRILS technology has presented a series of fascinating challenges, since the interaction between hollow fiber properties, ionic liquid properties and performance is complex. Properties measured with lab-scale hollow fiber contactors are used to estimate the performance of contactors that are similar in size and form factor to those to be used in flight-scale demonstrations. To accomplish this, component and system models have been built to relate the key scrubber and stripper design and operating variables with performance, and experiments directed to validate the models have been performed. System size, weight and power are all sensitive to component selection, arrangement, operating conditions and scaling.
Reliability will be extremely important for any long-range mission and depends critically on the stability of the ionic liquids and of the scrubber and stripper contactors. We will report on our continuing long term stability experiments for the ionic liquid and contactor materials, and our investigation of the physical properties of additional ionic liquids.
Description
Rebecca Kamire, Honeywell International Inc., USA
Stephen Yates, Honeywell International Inc., USA
Ted Bonk, Honeywell International Inc., USA
David Loeffelholz, Honeywell International Inc., USA
Rehan Zaki, Honeywell International Inc., USA
Eric Fox, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), USA
William Kaukler, University of Alabama, Huntsville (UAH), USA
Christopher Henry, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), USA
ICES302: Physio-Chemical Life Support - Air Revitalization Systems - Technology and Process Development
The 49th International Conference on Environmental Systems was held in Boston, Massachusetts, USA on 07 July 2019 through 11 July 2019.