학술논문

Volatile Analysis by Pyrolysis of Regolith for planetary resource exploration
Document Type
Conference
Source
2012 IEEE Aerospace Conference Aerospace Conference, 2012 IEEE. :1-11 Mar, 2012
Subject
Aerospace
Transportation
Signal Processing and Analysis
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Ovens
Temperature measurement
Instruments
Heating
Extraterrestrial measurements
Moon
Solids
Evolved gas analysis
Desert Research And Technology Studies (DRATS)
Lunar volatiles
Mass spectrometry
Planetary science
Resource utilization
Vacuum pyrolysis
Volatile Analysis by Pyrolysis of Regolith (VAPoR)
Language
ISSN
1095-323X
Abstract
The extraction and identification of volatile resources that could be utilized by humans including water, oxygen, noble gases, and hydrocarbons on the Moon, Mars, and small planetary bodies will be critical for future long-term human exploration of these objects. Vacuum pyrolysis at elevated temperatures has been shown to be an efficient way to release volatiles trapped inside solid samples. In order to maximize the extraction of volatiles, including oxygen and noble gases from the breakdown of minerals, a pyrolysis temperature of 1400°C or higher is required, which greatly exceeds the maximum temperatures of current state-of-the-art flight pyrolysis instruments. Here we report on the recent optimization and field testing results of a high temperature pyrolysis oven and sample manipulation system coupled to a mass spectrometer instrument called Volatile Analysis by Pyrolysis of Regolith (VAPoR). VAPoR is capable of heating solid samples under vacuum to temperatures above 1300°C and determining the composition of volatiles released as a function of temperature.