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NASA NTRS · Conference Paper

Scroll Pump Dust Tolerance Test for Martian Atomospheric Acquisition

Published 2020-05-29 From Glenn Research Center 2 authors

Attribution

This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Glenn Research Center.

Abstract

Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.

The ability to generate oxygen on the Martian surface will be essential to establishing a human presence on Mars. Flow generating devices such as pumps, compressors, and blowers will be essential components in Martian atmospheric acquisition and processing systems that need to work reliably during the mission duration. A concern with the reliability of the system is its ability to continue to perform nominally when Martian dust, if it bypasses the inlet filter, enters into the system. A series of tests were conducted to simulate the ingesting of Martian dust on a small scroll pump, similar to the one used on the MOXIE payload, during its pumping operation. The inlet of the pump was connected to a large volume closed-loop pipe system, known as the Mars Atmospheric Flow Loop, containing pure CO2 gas at a Martian pressure of 7 Torr. A length of stainless steel tubing was extended from the inlet port of scroll pump, which was mounted outside the flow loop, to the inside volume of the flow loop using a feed-through compression fitting. A steady low-speed flow was generated inside the flow loop to continuously disperse and transport the dust toward the inlet tubing. JSC-Mars 1 Martian simulant was used to challenge the pump. The pump performance parameters such as flow rate, pump speed, pressures and temperature were monitored during these tests. Samples of the dust entering the pump inlet were taken prior to exposure tests, using an inline filter element to determine the rate of dust ingestion into the internal components of the pump. After two tests with exposure times of the order of 60 minutes, the data indicated that small changes in pump performance took place under high rates of dust exposure.

Authors

  • Juan H Agui Glenn Research Center
  • Justin P Elchert Glenn Research Center

Keywords

  • scroll pump
  • Martian atmospheric

Citation: Juan H Agui, Justin P Elchert (2020). Scroll Pump Dust Tolerance Test for Martian Atomospheric Acquisition. Glenn Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 20200003007. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20200003007 ↗