NASA/TM-2005-214061, Perry, J.L. and Tomes, K.M. and Tatara, J.D., Thermal Catalytic Oxidation of Airborne Contaminants by a Reactor Using Ultra-Short Channel Length, Monolithic Catalyst Substrates(MSFC Center Director’s Discretionary Fund Final Report, Project No. 02–18), George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, September 2005, pp. 64, Format(s): PDF 8326k |
Contaminated air, whether in a crewed spacecraft cabin or terrestrial work and living spaces, is a pervasive problem affecting human health, performance, and well being. The need for highly effective, economical air quality processes
spans a wide range of terrestrial and space flight applications. Typically, air quality control processes rely on absorption-based processes. Most industrial packed-bed adsorption processes use activated carbon. Once saturated, the carbon is either dumped or regenerated. In either case, the dumped carbon and concentrated waste streams constitute a hazardous waste that must be handled safely while minimizing environmental impact. Thermal catalytic oxidation processes designed to address waste handling issues are moving to the forefront of cleaner air quality control
and process gas decontamination processes. Careful consideration in designing the catalyst substrate and reactor can lead to more complete contaminant destruction and poisoning resistance. Maintenance improvements leading to reduced waste handling and process downtime can also be realized. Performance of a prototype thermal catalytic reaction based on ultra-short waste channel, monolith catalyst substrate design, under a variety of process flow and contaminant loading conditions, is discussed.
| Keywords: | air quality, life support, contamination control, catalytic oxidation, volatile organic compounds, catalyst, reactor, environmental control |
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| Subjects: | Life Sciences: Man/Systems Technology and Life Support: Life Support Systems |
| ID Code: | 710 |
| Deposited On: | 30 January 2006 |