Abstract:
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In the past 20 years, considerable attention been paid to returning to our natural
satellite with robotic and, eventually, manned mission(s) not only to continue one the
most scientifically fruitful exploration programs in history, but also to open new
perspectives on engineering in planetary surfaces through lunar resource utilization.
Among the so-called lunar resources, oxygen is probably one of the most needed
and versatile. Applications of this gas range from fuel to life-support systems.
However, oxygen in the Moon is present not as an atmospheric gas but combined
with other elements forming minerals. Despite its very large abundance (almost 50%
of the mineral material may be oxygen) its extraction and exploitation requires some
technologies of not-so-straightforward application in a hostile environment such as
the lunar surface. Among these technologies, hydrogen reduction of ilmenite
(FeTiO3) has shown to be one of the most promising. This mineral is abundant in the
high-Ti basalts, identified in the Apollo XI and XVII landing sites. Processing of
ilmenite with molecular hydrogen at temperatures of about 800ºC yields to the
formation of metallic iron, titania (TiO2) and water. This latter product, can be
electrolyzed with relative ease to produce oxygen and hydrogen which, in turn, can
be recycled back to the initial reduction process. Recent evidence of lunar water may
add new hopes to considering the potential utilization of the ilmenite reduction
process for oxygen extraction. Our work aims at providing additional information on
the hydrogen and water estimations on the moon and on the mechanisms and
kinetics of ilmenite reduction in order to optimize the operation of an eventual ilmenite
processing unit (IPU) on the lunar surface. A variety of terrestrial ilmenites close in
composition to the lunar samples have been characterized and treated with a
Temperature-Programmed-Reduction (TPR) procedure. TPR allows a quantitative
evaluation on the effect of temperature on the amount of hydrogen “absorbed” by a
system, as well as the products and ultimately the efficiency of such reaction. In this
paper, such parameters have been studied at temperatures between 100 and 900ºC,
at different scan rates in order to assess the efficiency of the utilization of hydrogen
on the lunar surface Scanning rates very high affects the equilibrium of the
conversion, and very low ones change the expected behavior of the curve during the
reduction and it can cause instabilities. A good value of scanning rate has been
determined around 10C/min. |