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ISS ECLSS

The International Space Station Environmental Control and Life Support System (ECLSS) is a life support system that provides or controls atmospheric pressure, fire detection and suppression, oxygen levels, waste management and water supply. The highest priority for the ECLSS is the ISS atmosphere, but the system also collects, processes, and stores both waste and water produced and used by the crew—a process that recycles fluid from the sink, shower, toilet, and condensation from the air.

The interactions between the components of the ISS Environmental Control and Life Support System (ECLSS)

The Elektron system aboard Zvezda and a similar system in Destiny generate oxygen aboard the station.[1] The crew has a backup option in the form of bottled oxygen and Solid Fuel Oxygen Generation (SFOG) canisters.[2] Carbon dioxide is removed from the air by the Vozdukh system in Zvezda, one Carbon Dioxide Removal Assembly (CDRA) located in the U.S. Lab module, and one CDRA in the U.S. Node 3 module. Other by-products of human metabolism, such as methane from flatulence and ammonia from sweat, are removed by activated charcoal filters or by the Trace Contaminant Control System (TCCS).[2]

Water recovery systems edit

The ISS has two water recovery systems. Zvezda contains a water recovery system that processes water vapor from the atmosphere that could be used for drinking in an emergency but is normally fed to the Elektron system to produce oxygen. The American segment has a Water Recovery System installed during STS-126[3] that can process water vapour collected from the atmosphere and urine into water that is intended for drinking. The Water Recovery System was installed initially in Destiny on a temporary basis in November 2008[3] and moved into Tranquility (Node 3) in February 2010.[4]

 
The three ECLSS racks on display at the Marshall Space Flight Center ECLSS Test Facility in 2012. From left to right, the Water Recovery System (Rack 1), WRS (Rack 2) and Oxygen Generating System.

The Water Recovery System consists of a Urine Processor Assembly and a Water Processor Assembly, housed in two of the three ECLSS racks.[5]

The Urine Processor Assembly uses a low pressure vacuum distillation process that uses a centrifuge to compensate for the lack of gravity and thus aid in separating liquids and gasses.[6] The Urine Processor Assembly is designed to handle a load of 9 kg/day, corresponding to the needs of a 6-person crew.[3] Although the design called for recovery of 85% of the water content, subsequent experience with calcium sulfate precipitation[4] (in the free-fall conditions present on the ISS, calcium levels in urine are elevated due to bone density loss) has led to a revised operational level of recovering 70% of the water content.

Water from the Urine Processor Assembly and from waste water sources are combined to feed the Water Processor Assembly that filters out gasses and solid materials before passing through filter beds and then a high-temperature catalytic reactor assembly. The water is then tested by onboard sensors and unacceptable water is cycled back through the water processor assembly.[5][6]

The Volatile Removal Assembly flew on STS-89 in January 1998 to demonstrate the Water Processor Assembly's catalytic reactor in microgravity. A Vapour Compression Distillation Flight Experiment flew, but was destroyed, in STS-107.[6]

The distillation assembly of the Urine Processor Assembly failed on 21 November 2008, one day after the initial installation.[3] One of the three centrifuge speed sensors was reporting anomalous speeds, and high centrifuge motor current was observed. This was corrected by re-mounting the distillation assembly without several rubber vibration isolators. The distillation assembly failed again on 28 December 2008 due to high motor current and was replaced on 20 March 2009. Ultimately, during post-failure testing, one centrifuge speed sensor was found to be out of alignment and a compressor bearing had failed.[4]

Atmosphere edit

Several systems are currently used on board the ISS to maintain the spacecraft's atmosphere, which is similar to the Earth's.[7] Normal air pressure on the ISS is 101.3 kPa (14.7 psi); the same as at sea level on Earth. "While members of the ISS crew could stay healthy even with the pressure at a lower level, the equipment on the Station is very sensitive to pressure. If the pressure were to drop too far, it could cause problems with the Station equipment.".[8]

Air revitalization system edit

Carbon dioxide and trace contaminants are removed by the Air Revitalization System. This is a NASA rack, placed in Tranquility, designed to provide a Carbon Dioxide Removal Assembly (CDRA), a Trace Contaminant Control Subassembly (TCCS) to remove hazardous trace contamination from the atmosphere and a Major Constituent Analyser (MCA) to monitor nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, methane, hydrogen, and water vapour. The Air Revitalization System was flown to the station aboard STS-128 and was temporarily installed in the Japanese Experiment Module pressurised module. The system was scheduled to be transferred to Tranquility after it arrived and was installed during Space Shuttle Endeavour mission STS-130.[9]

Oxygen generating system edit

The Oxygen Generating System (OGS) is a NASA rack designed to electrolyse water from the Water Recovery System to produce oxygen and hydrogen. The oxygen is delivered to the cabin atmosphere. The unit is installed in the Destiny module. During one of the spacewalks conducted by STS-117 astronauts, a hydrogen vent valve required to begin using the system was installed.[10] The system was delivered in 2006 by STS-121, and became operational on 12 July 2007.[11] From 2001, the US orbital segment had used oxygen in a pressurized storage tank on the Quest airlock module, or from the Russian service module. Prior to the activation of the Sabatier System in October 2010 hydrogen and carbon dioxide extracted from the cabin was vented overboard.[6]

In 2011, American news outlet CBS news and news magazine spaceflightnow reported "The OGA over the past six months has not been running well because the water that's been fed to it is just slightly too acidic," said station Flight Director Chris Edelen. "For the past several months, the station crew has been using oxygen brought up aboard visiting Progress supply spacecraft, a European cargo craft and the Russian Elektron oxygen generator while awaiting delivery of the OGA repair equipment. The OGA, like the Elektron, uses electricity to split water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen. "[12]

The Advanced Closed Loop System (ACLS) is an ESA rack that converts carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and methane. The carbon dioxide is removed from the station air by an amine scrubber, then removed from the scrubber by steam and converted to methane and water by a Sabatier reaction using hydrogen electrolyically produced from water. The methane is vented, the water is recycled by electrolysis producing hydrogen and oxygen. This is very different from the NASA oxygen-generating rack that is reliant on a steady supply of water from Earth in order to generate oxygen. This water-saving capability will reduce the need to launch an extra 400 liters of water in cargo resupply per year. 50% of the carbon dioxide that it processes can be converted to oxygen and by itself it can regenerate enough oxygen for 3 astronauts.[13] The other 50% of carbon dioxide is jettisoned from the ISS along with the methane that is generated.[13] ACLS has three subsystems :

  • The Carbon dioxide Concentration Assembly (CCA) uses an amine reaction to absorb and concentrate carbon dioxide from cabin air to keep carbon dioxide within acceptable levels.
  • The Oxygen Generation Assembly (OGA), an electrolyser that separates water into oxygen and hydrogen.
  • the Carbon dioxide Reprocessing Assembly (CRA). A ‘Sabatier reactor’ reacts CO2 from CCA with hydrogen from the OGA to produce water and methane.

The ACLS is a technology demonstrator (planned to operate from 1 to 2 years) but if it is successful it will be left on board the ISS permanently. It was delivered on the Kounotori 7 launch in September 2018 and installed in the Destiny module. A year after delivery, most of it was working and new parts were expected to get all three subsystems fully functional in 2020.[14][needs update]

Sabatier system edit

The NASA Sabatier system, since 2010, closes the oxygen loop in the ECLSS by combining waste hydrogen from the Oxygen generating system and carbon dioxide from the station atmosphere using the Sabatier reaction to reuse the oxygen. The outputs of this reaction are water, and methane. The water is recycled to reduce the total amount of water that must be carried to the station from Earth, and the methane is vented overboard by the now shared hydrogen vent line installed for the Oxygen generating system.[15]

Elektron edit

 
Elektron units in the Zvezda service module.

Elektron is a Russian Electrolytic Oxygen Generator, which was also used on Mir. It uses electrolysis to produce oxygen. This process splits water molecules reclaimed from other uses on board the station into oxygen and hydrogen via electrolysis. The oxygen is vented into the cabin and the hydrogen is vented into space. The three Russian Elektron oxygen generators on board the International Space Station have been plagued with problems, frequently forcing the crew to use backup sources (either bottled oxygen or the Vika system discussed below). To support a crew of six, NASA added the oxygen generating system discussed above.

In 2004, the Elektron unit shut down due to (initially) unknown causes. Two weeks of troubleshooting resulted in the unit starting up again, then immediately shutting down. The cause was eventually traced to gas bubbles in the unit, which remained non-functional until a Progress resupply mission in October 2004.[16] In 2005 ISS personnel tapped into the oxygen supply of the recently arrived Progress resupply spacecraft, when the Elektron unit failed.[17] In 2006 fumes from a malfunctioning Elektron unit prompted NASA flight engineers to declare a "spacecraft emergency". A burning smell led the ISS crew to suspect another Elektron fire, but the unit was only "very hot". A leak of corrosive, odorless potassium hydroxide forced the ISS crew to don gloves and face masks. It has been conjectured that the smell came from overheated rubber seals. The incident occurred shortly after STS-115 left and just before arrival of a resupply mission (including space tourist Anousheh Ansari).[18] The Elektron did not come back online until November 2006, after new valves and cables arrived on the October 2006 Progress resupply vessel.[19] The ERPTC (Electrical Recovery Processing Terminal Current) was inserted into the ISS to prevent harm to the systems. In October 2020 the Elektron system failed and had to be deactivated for a short time before being repaired.[20]

Vika edit

The Vika or TGK oxygen generator, also known as Solid Fuel Oxygen Generation (SFOG) when used on the ISS, is a chemical oxygen generator originally developed by Roscosmos for Mir, and it provides an alternate oxygen generating system.[21] It uses canisters of solid lithium perchlorate, which are burned to create gaseous oxygen.[21] Each canister can supply the oxygen needs of one crewmember for one day.[22]

Vozdukh edit

Another Russian system, Vozdukh (Russian Воздух, meaning "air"), removes carbon dioxide from the air based on the use of regenerable absorbers of carbon dioxide gas.[23]

Temperature and Humidity Control edit

Temperature and Humidity Control (THC) is the subsystem of the ISS ECLSS concerned with the maintenance of a steady air temperature and the control of the moisture in the station's air supply. Thermal Control System (TCS) is a component part of the THC system and subdivides into the Active Thermal Control System (ATCS) and Passive Thermal Control System (PTCS). Controlling humidity is possible through lowering or raising the temperature and through adding moisture to the air.[citation needed]

Fire Detection and Suppression edit

Fire Detection and Suppression (FDS) is the subsystem devoted to identifying that there has been a fire and taking steps to fight it.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tariq Malik (15 February 2006). "Air Apparent: New Oxygen Systems for the ISS". Space.com. Retrieved 21 November 2008.
  2. ^ a b Patrick L. Barry (13 November 2000). . NASA. Archived from the original on 21 September 2008. Retrieved 21 November 2008.
  3. ^ a b c d D.Layne Carter (2009). Status of the Regenerative ECLSS Water Recovery System (2009-01-2352) (PDF) (Report). NASA/SAE. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  4. ^ a b c Layne Carter (2010). Status of the Regenerative ECLS Water Recovery System (PDF) (Report). NASA. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  5. ^ a b Robert M. Bagdigian; Dale Cloud (2005). Status of the International Space Station Regenerative ECLSS Water Recovery and Oxygen Generation Systems (2005-01-2779) (PDF) (Report). NASA/SAE. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d "International Space Station Environmental Control and Life Support System" (PDF). NASA. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  7. ^ Craig Freudenrich (20 November 2000). "How Space Stations Work". Howstuffworks. Retrieved 23 November 2008.
  8. ^ . NASAexplores. NASA. Archived from the original on 14 November 2006. Retrieved 31 October 2008.
  9. ^ "STS-128 Press Kit" (PDF). NASA. 18 August 2009. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  10. ^ "International Space Station Status Report: SS07-01". NASA. 5 January 2007. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  11. ^ Chris Bergin (12 July 2007). "Oxygen Generating System activated onboard ISS". NASASpaceflight.com. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  12. ^ "Spaceflight Now | STS-133 Shuttle Report | Astronauts service station's air purifier, oxygen generator".
  13. ^ a b Advanced Closed Loop System Retrieved 15 December 2020
  14. ^ New life support system cleans air during full-house Space Station 10/12/2019
  15. ^ "The Sabatier System: Producing Water on the Space Station". NASA. 17 August 2015. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  16. ^ Amit Asaravala (20 September 2004). "Space O2 Generator Fails Again". Wired. Wired News. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  17. ^ Tariq Malik (4 January 2005). "Repaired Oxygen Generator Fails Again Aboard ISS". Space.com. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  18. ^ William Harwood (18 September 2006). "Oxygen generator problem triggers station alarm". Spaceflight Now. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  19. ^ "International Space Station Status Report #48". NASA. 3 November 2006. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  20. ^ https://tass.com/science/1214871 . Retrieved 14 December
  21. ^ a b
  22. ^ "Breathing Easy on the Space Station | Science Mission Directorate".
  23. ^ "In-Flight Carbon Dioxide Exposures and Related Symptoms: Association, Susceptibility, and Operational Implications" 27 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine (see page 6), NASA, June 2010.

External links edit

eclss, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, in. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2014 The article s lead section may need to be rewritten Please help improve the lead and read the lead layout guide January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The International Space Station Environmental Control and Life Support System ECLSS is a life support system that provides or controls atmospheric pressure fire detection and suppression oxygen levels waste management and water supply The highest priority for the ECLSS is the ISS atmosphere but the system also collects processes and stores both waste and water produced and used by the crew a process that recycles fluid from the sink shower toilet and condensation from the air The interactions between the components of the ISS Environmental Control and Life Support System ECLSS The Elektron system aboard Zvezda and a similar system in Destiny generate oxygen aboard the station 1 The crew has a backup option in the form of bottled oxygen and Solid Fuel Oxygen Generation SFOG canisters 2 Carbon dioxide is removed from the air by the Vozdukh system in Zvezda one Carbon Dioxide Removal Assembly CDRA located in the U S Lab module and one CDRA in the U S Node 3 module Other by products of human metabolism such as methane from flatulence and ammonia from sweat are removed by activated charcoal filters or by the Trace Contaminant Control System TCCS 2 Contents 1 Water recovery systems 2 Atmosphere 2 1 Air revitalization system 2 2 Oxygen generating system 2 3 Sabatier system 2 4 Elektron 2 5 Vika 2 6 Vozdukh 3 Temperature and Humidity Control 4 Fire Detection and Suppression 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksWater recovery systems editThe ISS has two water recovery systems Zvezda contains a water recovery system that processes water vapor from the atmosphere that could be used for drinking in an emergency but is normally fed to the Elektron system to produce oxygen The American segment has a Water Recovery System installed during STS 126 3 that can process water vapour collected from the atmosphere and urine into water that is intended for drinking The Water Recovery System was installed initially in Destiny on a temporary basis in November 2008 3 and moved into Tranquility Node 3 in February 2010 4 nbsp The three ECLSS racks on display at the Marshall Space Flight Center ECLSS Test Facility in 2012 From left to right the Water Recovery System Rack 1 WRS Rack 2 and Oxygen Generating System The Water Recovery System consists of a Urine Processor Assembly and a Water Processor Assembly housed in two of the three ECLSS racks 5 The Urine Processor Assembly uses a low pressure vacuum distillation process that uses a centrifuge to compensate for the lack of gravity and thus aid in separating liquids and gasses 6 The Urine Processor Assembly is designed to handle a load of 9 kg day corresponding to the needs of a 6 person crew 3 Although the design called for recovery of 85 of the water content subsequent experience with calcium sulfate precipitation 4 in the free fall conditions present on the ISS calcium levels in urine are elevated due to bone density loss has led to a revised operational level of recovering 70 of the water content Water from the Urine Processor Assembly and from waste water sources are combined to feed the Water Processor Assembly that filters out gasses and solid materials before passing through filter beds and then a high temperature catalytic reactor assembly The water is then tested by onboard sensors and unacceptable water is cycled back through the water processor assembly 5 6 The Volatile Removal Assembly flew on STS 89 in January 1998 to demonstrate the Water Processor Assembly s catalytic reactor in microgravity A Vapour Compression Distillation Flight Experiment flew but was destroyed in STS 107 6 The distillation assembly of the Urine Processor Assembly failed on 21 November 2008 one day after the initial installation 3 One of the three centrifuge speed sensors was reporting anomalous speeds and high centrifuge motor current was observed This was corrected by re mounting the distillation assembly without several rubber vibration isolators The distillation assembly failed again on 28 December 2008 due to high motor current and was replaced on 20 March 2009 Ultimately during post failure testing one centrifuge speed sensor was found to be out of alignment and a compressor bearing had failed 4 Atmosphere editSeveral systems are currently used on board the ISS to maintain the spacecraft s atmosphere which is similar to the Earth s 7 Normal air pressure on the ISS is 101 3 kPa 14 7 psi the same as at sea level on Earth While members of the ISS crew could stay healthy even with the pressure at a lower level the equipment on the Station is very sensitive to pressure If the pressure were to drop too far it could cause problems with the Station equipment 8 Air revitalization system edit Carbon dioxide and trace contaminants are removed by the Air Revitalization System This is a NASA rack placed in Tranquility designed to provide a Carbon Dioxide Removal Assembly CDRA a Trace Contaminant Control Subassembly TCCS to remove hazardous trace contamination from the atmosphere and a Major Constituent Analyser MCA to monitor nitrogen oxygen carbon dioxide methane hydrogen and water vapour The Air Revitalization System was flown to the station aboard STS 128 and was temporarily installed in the Japanese Experiment Module pressurised module The system was scheduled to be transferred to Tranquility after it arrived and was installed during Space Shuttle Endeavour mission STS 130 9 Oxygen generating system edit The Oxygen Generating System OGS is a NASA rack designed to electrolyse water from the Water Recovery System to produce oxygen and hydrogen The oxygen is delivered to the cabin atmosphere The unit is installed in the Destiny module During one of the spacewalks conducted by STS 117 astronauts a hydrogen vent valve required to begin using the system was installed 10 The system was delivered in 2006 by STS 121 and became operational on 12 July 2007 11 From 2001 the US orbital segment had used oxygen in a pressurized storage tank on the Quest airlock module or from the Russian service module Prior to the activation of the Sabatier System in October 2010 hydrogen and carbon dioxide extracted from the cabin was vented overboard 6 In 2011 American news outlet CBS news and news magazine spaceflightnow reported The OGA over the past six months has not been running well because the water that s been fed to it is just slightly too acidic said station Flight Director Chris Edelen For the past several months the station crew has been using oxygen brought up aboard visiting Progress supply spacecraft a European cargo craft and the Russian Elektron oxygen generator while awaiting delivery of the OGA repair equipment The OGA like the Elektron uses electricity to split water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen 12 The Advanced Closed Loop System ACLS is an ESA rack that converts carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and methane The carbon dioxide is removed from the station air by an amine scrubber then removed from the scrubber by steam and converted to methane and water by a Sabatier reaction using hydrogen electrolyically produced from water The methane is vented the water is recycled by electrolysis producing hydrogen and oxygen This is very different from the NASA oxygen generating rack that is reliant on a steady supply of water from Earth in order to generate oxygen This water saving capability will reduce the need to launch an extra 400 liters of water in cargo resupply per year 50 of the carbon dioxide that it processes can be converted to oxygen and by itself it can regenerate enough oxygen for 3 astronauts 13 The other 50 of carbon dioxide is jettisoned from the ISS along with the methane that is generated 13 ACLS has three subsystems The Carbon dioxide Concentration Assembly CCA uses an amine reaction to absorb and concentrate carbon dioxide from cabin air to keep carbon dioxide within acceptable levels The Oxygen Generation Assembly OGA an electrolyser that separates water into oxygen and hydrogen the Carbon dioxide Reprocessing Assembly CRA A Sabatier reactor reacts CO2 from CCA with hydrogen from the OGA to produce water and methane The ACLS is a technology demonstrator planned to operate from 1 to 2 years but if it is successful it will be left on board the ISS permanently It was delivered on the Kounotori 7 launch in September 2018 and installed in the Destiny module A year after delivery most of it was working and new parts were expected to get all three subsystems fully functional in 2020 14 needs update Sabatier system edit The NASA Sabatier system since 2010 closes the oxygen loop in the ECLSS by combining waste hydrogen from the Oxygen generating system and carbon dioxide from the station atmosphere using the Sabatier reaction to reuse the oxygen The outputs of this reaction are water and methane The water is recycled to reduce the total amount of water that must be carried to the station from Earth and the methane is vented overboard by the now shared hydrogen vent line installed for the Oxygen generating system 15 Elektron edit nbsp Elektron units in the Zvezda service module Elektron is a Russian Electrolytic Oxygen Generator which was also used on Mir It uses electrolysis to produce oxygen This process splits water molecules reclaimed from other uses on board the station into oxygen and hydrogen via electrolysis The oxygen is vented into the cabin and the hydrogen is vented into space The three Russian Elektron oxygen generators on board the International Space Station have been plagued with problems frequently forcing the crew to use backup sources either bottled oxygen or the Vika system discussed below To support a crew of six NASA added the oxygen generating system discussed above In 2004 the Elektron unit shut down due to initially unknown causes Two weeks of troubleshooting resulted in the unit starting up again then immediately shutting down The cause was eventually traced to gas bubbles in the unit which remained non functional until a Progress resupply mission in October 2004 16 In 2005 ISS personnel tapped into the oxygen supply of the recently arrived Progress resupply spacecraft when the Elektron unit failed 17 In 2006 fumes from a malfunctioning Elektron unit prompted NASA flight engineers to declare a spacecraft emergency A burning smell led the ISS crew to suspect another Elektron fire but the unit was only very hot A leak of corrosive odorless potassium hydroxide forced the ISS crew to don gloves and face masks It has been conjectured that the smell came from overheated rubber seals The incident occurred shortly after STS 115 left and just before arrival of a resupply mission including space tourist Anousheh Ansari 18 The Elektron did not come back online until November 2006 after new valves and cables arrived on the October 2006 Progress resupply vessel 19 The ERPTC Electrical Recovery Processing Terminal Current was inserted into the ISS to prevent harm to the systems In October 2020 the Elektron system failed and had to be deactivated for a short time before being repaired 20 Vika edit Main article Vika oxygen generator The Vika or TGK oxygen generator also known as Solid Fuel Oxygen Generation SFOG when used on the ISS is a chemical oxygen generator originally developed by Roscosmos for Mir and it provides an alternate oxygen generating system 21 It uses canisters of solid lithium perchlorate which are burned to create gaseous oxygen 21 Each canister can supply the oxygen needs of one crewmember for one day 22 Vozdukh edit Another Russian system Vozdukh Russian Vozduh meaning air removes carbon dioxide from the air based on the use of regenerable absorbers of carbon dioxide gas 23 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2010 Temperature and Humidity Control editTemperature and Humidity Control THC is the subsystem of the ISS ECLSS concerned with the maintenance of a steady air temperature and the control of the moisture in the station s air supply Thermal Control System TCS is a component part of the THC system and subdivides into the Active Thermal Control System ATCS and Passive Thermal Control System PTCS Controlling humidity is possible through lowering or raising the temperature and through adding moisture to the air citation needed Fire Detection and Suppression editFire Detection and Suppression FDS is the subsystem devoted to identifying that there has been a fire and taking steps to fight it nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Life support system of the International Space Station See also editInternational Space Station maintenanceReferences edit Tariq Malik 15 February 2006 Air Apparent New Oxygen Systems for the ISS Space com Retrieved 21 November 2008 a b Patrick L Barry 13 November 2000 Breathing Easy on the Space Station NASA Archived from the original on 21 September 2008 Retrieved 21 November 2008 a b c d D Layne Carter 2009 Status of the Regenerative ECLSS Water Recovery System 2009 01 2352 PDF Report NASA SAE Retrieved 17 September 2014 a b c Layne Carter 2010 Status of the Regenerative ECLS Water Recovery System PDF Report NASA Retrieved 17 September 2014 a b Robert M Bagdigian Dale Cloud 2005 Status of the International Space Station Regenerative ECLSS Water Recovery and Oxygen Generation Systems 2005 01 2779 PDF Report NASA SAE Retrieved 17 September 2014 a b c d International Space Station Environmental Control and Life Support System PDF NASA Retrieved 25 January 2010 Craig Freudenrich 20 November 2000 How Space Stations Work Howstuffworks Retrieved 23 November 2008 5 8 The Air Up There NASAexplores NASA Archived from the original on 14 November 2006 Retrieved 31 October 2008 STS 128 Press Kit PDF NASA 18 August 2009 Retrieved 1 September 2009 International Space Station Status Report SS07 01 NASA 5 January 2007 Retrieved 25 January 2010 Chris Bergin 12 July 2007 Oxygen Generating System activated onboard ISS NASASpaceflight com Retrieved 25 January 2010 Spaceflight Now STS 133 Shuttle Report Astronauts service station s air purifier oxygen generator a b Advanced Closed Loop System Retrieved 15 December 2020 New life support system cleans air during full house Space Station 10 12 2019 The Sabatier System Producing Water on the Space Station NASA 17 August 2015 Retrieved 23 January 2018 Amit Asaravala 20 September 2004 Space O2 Generator Fails Again Wired Wired News Retrieved 25 January 2010 Tariq Malik 4 January 2005 Repaired Oxygen Generator Fails Again Aboard ISS Space com Retrieved 25 January 2010 William Harwood 18 September 2006 Oxygen generator problem triggers station alarm Spaceflight Now Retrieved 25 January 2010 International Space Station Status Report 48 NASA 3 November 2006 Retrieved 25 January 2010 https tass com science 1214871 Retrieved 14 December a b Kerry Ellis International Life Support Ask Magazine Breathing Easy on the Space Station Science Mission Directorate In Flight Carbon Dioxide Exposures and Related Symptoms Association Susceptibility and Operational Implications Archived 27 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine see page 6 NASA June 2010 External links edit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ISS ECLSS amp oldid 1169611659, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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