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A Review of International Space Station Habitable Element Equipment Offgassing Characteristics
Author(s) -
Jay L. Perry
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
40th international conference on environmental systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2010-6068
Subject(s) - payload (computing) , spacecraft , international space station , contamination control , computer science , systems engineering , environmental science , control (management) , aerospace engineering , aeronautics , engineering , reliability engineering , automotive engineering , contamination , computer network , ecology , artificial intelligence , network packet , biology
Crewed spacecraft trace contaminant control employs both passive and active methods to achieve acceptable cabin atmospheric quality. Passive methods include carefully selecting materials of construction, employing clean manufacturing practices, and minimizing systems and payload operational impacts to the cabin environment. Materials selection and manufacturing processes constitute the first level of equipment offgassing control. An elementlevel equipment offgassing test provides preflight verification that passive controls have been successful. Offgassing test results from multiple International Space Station (ISS) habitable elements and cargo vehicles are summarized and implications for active contamination control equipment design are discussed. Nomenclature Ci = chemical compound cabin concentration gi = chemical compound generation rate mg = milligram m = meter n = number of sampling events t = time V = spacecraft cabin free volume

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