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[overhauling the question to get rid of misconceptions, which were irrelevant anyway]

In the balance of input/output of the system ISS is, I spotted something that looks like build-up of stockpile of oxygen.

ISS receives large shipments of water with every resupply mission - amounts of order of 420kg.

The water is circulated on ISS with very little losses - recycled for drinking or for use in experiments, moisture from air captured, urine purified. Water is also broken up into oxygen and hydrogen through elextrolysis, then the hydrogen, through Sabatier process is used to replace oxygen in carbon dioxide produced by breathing, the resulting methane vented into space. Additionally, dry food is metabolized into carbon dioxide and water, adding even more water to the system.

There's supposedly a shortage of hydrogen for the Sabatier process, extra hydrogen delivered by cargo shipments.

Generally, on input we have big shipments of $H_2O$, some $H_2$ and a lot of organic compounds of food, built mostly from carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.

On output we have the vented $CH_4$, and small amounts of $H_2O$ in brine left after purifying the astronauts' urine.

And so, it seems we have excess oxygen build-up.

Let's try to tally the known loss paths:

  • Brine left after reprocessing the urine. I don't know how much of it is produced, but supposedly these are "small amounts".
  • Some oxygen is lost with airlock venting during EVA egress, but alongside with the oxygen about 4x as much of nitrogen is lost - and we don't hear of massive shipments of nitrogen, 4x as much as water!
  • Leakage of the station - as above, 4x as much nitrogen leaks.

None of these is significant enough to account for the large shipments.

So where does all the extra oxygen go?

...or are they incessantly stockpiling on the surplus water? enter image description here


Some of my calculations:

(On the losses side I approximate mass of oxygen as mass of water wherever water is lost; in fact it's 16/18 or 88% but since I'm still not getting anywhere into the ballpark, the 12% error is negligible, especially that counting the lost water as oxygen I'm overestimating the losses.)

Human usage: 550 liters of pure oxygen (19 cubic feet) per day. src At 1.326 gram per litre src that's 730 grams per day. Times crew of 6, 4380 grams per day. There are 5-6 resupply missions per yearsrc., so let's say 60 days in between resupplies. 262 kg turns into carbon dioxide.

Half of that is reclaimed through the Sabatier process. src. 131kg of oxygen vented bound into CO2.

About 2kg of urine per person per day.src. 93% reclaimed, 7% lost, so 140g. Six people, 60 days - 50kg lost with brine from urine. Also 200g of fecal losses, not reclaimed AFAIK, x6 x60 - 72kg.

Quest airlock volume: 34 cubic meters src. 34,000 liters of 20% oxygen (80% nitrogen) vented per EVA. So, 6800l, or at 1.326 g/l, 9kg per EVA. About 10 EVA per year; this is very variable, let's round to 2 per resupply src., so 18kg.

131+50+72+18=271kg.

If, as David Hammen claims, the Sabatier process is no longer performed, and the airlock wastes negligible amount of air, that's another 131kg minus 18. We're at 384kg max loss vs 373kg of oxygen brought in as 420kg of water brought with resupply, and it seems everything works out to within the error margin. But that is based on several unsourced assumptions: non-reclaimed fecal losses, Sabatier inactive, airlock pumped down. Could someone confirm? Primarily, the Sabatier process, as it would account for 70% of the losses!

SF.
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  • well if that is true then that is disappointing that they are wasting water like that. Then again I suppose it would be difficult make waste water potable in space. – anon Aug 24 '18 at 22:10
  • True for the original (Russian segment) recycler. Not true for the newer US segment water recycler. http://blogs.esa.int/VITAmission/2017/09/01/recycling-water-on-the-iss-an-infographic/ – BowlOfRed Aug 24 '18 at 23:45
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    Highly related (not a duplicate): https://space.stackexchange.com/questions/26617/how-close-is-the-iss-to-a-closed-system-in-terms-of-carbon-hydrogen-and-oxyge The hydrogen isn't vented any more, it goes into a Sabatier system to make more water. The answers to this question address the closure of the cycle. – Organic Marble Aug 24 '18 at 23:51
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    @OrganicMarble: ...and as you look at this whole loop, we're still losing hydrogen from water (in methane), but recovering all the oxygen. Some hydrogen arrives in food (e.g carbohydrates), burned into water and CO2 then reunited with its carbon through Sabatier process and vented into the space. But all the oxygen that arrived by supply ships in water and carbohydrates remains in the system! Nothing vented, nothing lost! If it was lost to leaks, they'd be losing nitrogen at 4x that rate too, yet I don't hear about 4x as much nitrogen being delivered. EVA? sublimator cooling? Brine disposal? – SF. Aug 25 '18 at 00:25
  • A small amount of O2/N2 is lost to air lock cycling. – Organic Marble Aug 25 '18 at 00:47
  • @OrganicMarble - AFAIK, the Sabatier unit was one of NASA's many failed experiment that were declared a "success" (think tethers) and then quietly decommissioned. It repeatedly underwent failures of multiple types. – David Hammen Aug 25 '18 at 02:36
  • @DavidHammen could well be. I've been out of it since 2014. – Organic Marble Aug 25 '18 at 03:04
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    This report says recycled water is used as drinking water: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20160009723.pdf – Hobbes Aug 25 '18 at 19:19
  • @Hobbes: ...which gets recirculated. If the Sabatier process is missing, and CO2 is vented or otherwise removed from circulation, it would indeed explain the fate of the oxygen. – SF. Aug 27 '18 at 12:50
  • @OrganicMarble: That may account for a significant oxygen loss - the rebreathing procedure purging nitrogen dissolved in blood requires filling the airlock with pure oxygen; I believe the ambient air would be displaced into the station, not vented. Depressurizing the airlock would vent mostly oxygen. Still, that's only about 44kg of oxygen per egress, and EVA aren't that frequent. ~10-12/year, with ~5-6 resupply missions a year, that's less than 100kg per resupply mission. – SF. Aug 27 '18 at 13:15
  • I'd expect the astronauts to breathe pure oxygen from a cylinder using a mask, and later on from their EVA suit, not from the ambient air. – Hobbes Aug 27 '18 at 13:18
  • I believe @Hobbes is correct in that the astronauts enter the airlock which is filled with the standard O2/N2 mix and do the prebreathe protocol using masks. After suit donning, a scavenge pump pulls the airlock pressure down to a low value, exhausting into the ISS general volume. The last 5 psi or so (O2/N2 mix) are wasted overboard. – Organic Marble Aug 27 '18 at 18:14
  • I also believe it's more like 1 or 2 EVAs a year these days. – Organic Marble Aug 27 '18 at 18:15
  • You can not make all the water into oxygen. You must leave some and purify it for the person to drink. – user3528438 Aug 27 '18 at 22:24
  • @user3528438: Astronauts are getting a couple hundred liters of fresh water with every delivery. – SF. Aug 28 '18 at 00:10
  • Nice rewrite! +1 – Organic Marble Aug 29 '18 at 14:33
  • The 550 l oxygen per day are for an average adult at rest. But an astronaut in the ISS is at rest when sleeping, there are phases of medium and high work level too. I got some values from a book about sports physiology: at rest 0.25 l/min, at medium work 1.8 l/min and at maximum work 3.0 l/min. Actual oxygen consumption per day depends on work profile and training activties. Of course there is a dependency on size and weight of the astronaut. – Uwe Aug 30 '18 at 12:18
  • @Uwe: outside EVA work and workout, an astronaut is more at rest than you are when doing a sitting work. – SF. Aug 30 '18 at 12:19

1 Answers1

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Your premise is incorrect. According to this report, the water recovered from the toilets and ventilation system etc. is used as potable water and not just electrolysed into oxygen.

Hobbes
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    Yes, it's used for both. The answer to this question shows the flow diagram. https://space.stackexchange.com/questions/26617/how-close-is-the-iss-to-a-closed-system-in-terms-of-carbon-hydrogen-and-oxyge – Organic Marble Aug 27 '18 at 20:14
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    Even so, the oxygen (bound to that water) doesn't leave the system and new water is brought with every shipment. Progress delivers 420kg of water - so roughly that much should be lost in between deliveries, either as water or as oxygen or CO2, for the system to remain at steady state. – SF. Aug 28 '18 at 00:18
  • As for how much oxygen is generated from the water, ISS Live shows the current oxygen production levels from reclaimed water at about 3 kg per day. – Matthew R. Sep 02 '18 at 01:05