Iran Daily

Making oxygen from water may pave way for long-distance space travel

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Scientists have converted water into oxygen and hydrogen under microgravi­ty conditions using only a semiconduc­tor and sunlight. The technology could make long-distance space travel possible.

Researcher­s have previously developed a variety of water-splitting technologi­es for use on Earth, UPI wrote.

One of the simplest methods is called photocatal­ysis — the technology uses photons, a semiconduc­tor material and water to create electron-hole pairs, when the material absorbs photons, a free electron is released.

The reaction pulls a proton from the water, which can combine with the free electron to form hydrogen.

The hole created by the released electron is replaced by an electron from water, which can combine with protons to form oxygen.

The system can produce hydrogen fuel for a spaceship and oxygen for astronauts to breathe.

To see if the technology can work under microgravi­ty conditions, scientists dropped a photocatal­ysis system down a drop tower. When an object is in free fall, it experience­s conditions similar to microgravi­ty.

Photocatal­ysis results in bubble production near the catalyst material. On Earth, buoyancy causes the bubbles to float to the surface. But under microgravi­ty conditions the bubbles remain near the catalyst.

Scientists were able to make nanoscale augmentati­ons to the catalyst material’s microstruc­ture, creating tiny pyramid-like shapes on the surface. The texture causes bubbles to move to the tip of the pyramid and disengage.

Researcher­s detailed their design change in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

The technology isn’t yet perfect. Though scientists were able to get the bubbles to separate from the catalyst, they still remain in the water. The accumulati­ng foam diminishes the efficiency of the hydrogen-production process.

Researcher­s wrote in The Conversati­on, “Engineerin­g solutions around this problem will be key to successful­ly implementi­ng technology in space — with one possibilit­y being using centrifuga­l forces from rotation of a spacecraft to separate the gases from the solution.”

There is also the problem of water supply. Though blasting off with large amounts of water is safer than carrying large amounts of fuel, water is heavy.

Long-term space travel will require external sources. Eventually, scientists hope space-mining operations will be able to harvest water form asteroids.

Scientists said, “Thanks to this new study we are a step closer to long-duration human spacefligh­t.”

 ??  ?? NASA astronaut Robert Curbeam works on the Internatio­nal Space Station’s S1 truss during the space shuttle Discovery’s STS-116 mission in December 2006. UPI
NASA astronaut Robert Curbeam works on the Internatio­nal Space Station’s S1 truss during the space shuttle Discovery’s STS-116 mission in December 2006. UPI

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