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MMM Classics Year 10: MMM #s 91-100 - Moon Society

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hydrogen that has to be brought from Earth, compared to the<br />

approximately 1:5 combustion mass ratio of H:O for Shuttle<br />

main engine technology. Brower et al. [1] expect that with an<br />

H:Al:O mass ratio of 1:2.5:2.75, a specific impulse of 475<br />

seconds can be achieved. This would increase performance, but<br />

at the cost of bringing more hydrogen from Earth.<br />

It might turn out that, for instance, lunar aluminum<br />

and oxygen alone would be best for a lunar lander flying back<br />

and forth between the lunar surface and an L1 staging base,<br />

while lunar aluminum and oxygen combined with terrestrial<br />

hydrogen would be more advantageous for a space-to-space<br />

lunar transfer vehicle (LTV) flying between the L1 station and<br />

LEO. Trade studies are needed to decide for what flight phases<br />

is is most advantageous (i.e. what minimizes mass launched<br />

from Earth) to use lunar aluminum and oxygen alone, and<br />

when it is best to add terrestrial hydrogen. How much hydrogen<br />

should be added to the propellant mix, weighing the cost of<br />

mass launch against performance gain?<br />

It would also be worth doing trade studies to answer<br />

the question: would it be advantageous to ship lunar aluminum<br />

and oxygen propellants to LEO? When the overall mass flow in<br />

the system is considered, will that reduce mass launched from<br />

Earth? Further, would aerobraking for LTV return to LEO be<br />

useful in a transportation scheme making heavy use of lunar<br />

propellants? Or would the propellant used in hauling the aerobrake<br />

around exceed that saved when braking into LEO?<br />

If one wants to extract aluminum as well as oxygen<br />

from lunar materials, it means reexamining the extraction<br />

techniques. Reduction of ilmenite, for example, an often cited<br />

approach, will not do. Ilmenite reduction starts with a[n iron<br />

and] titanium-rich mineral found in lunar mare soil and<br />

produces oxygen, but no aluminum. Other oxygen extraction<br />

methods that do not produce aluminum will not do, either, at<br />

least not without steps added to get aluminum metal.<br />

This also means carefully considering where on the<br />

<strong>Moon</strong> to go for raw material. Lunar maria are high in iron and<br />

titanium, but tend to run low in aluminum, only around 7%.<br />

The highlands, in contrast, are rich in an aluminum-rich<br />

material called anorthosite, and highland soil tends to be about<br />

13% aluminum by weight [1]. If aluminum and oxygen are<br />

both target materials, the lunar highlands are the better place to<br />

go for feedstock. [Editor’s qualifying comment follows article.]<br />

Lunar Propellants for Interplanetary Flights<br />

Lunar derived oxygen and aluminum propellants<br />

could also be used to aid the departure of interplanetary space<br />

flights, if those flights were launched from an L1 base on<br />

gravity slingshot trajectories as described in the preceding<br />

paper [3] [<strong>MMM</strong> # 94, April ‘96] If a “triple thrust” departure<br />

is used to go to Mars, for example, using both a lunar and an<br />

Earth flyby, the total velocity change or delta V (DV) needed to<br />

depart the lunar vicinity is only 350 meters [0.35 km] per<br />

second. DV gives a measure of the amount of energy and<br />

propellant needed to accomplish a maneuver, if you know the<br />

performance of the propellant combination your ship is using.<br />

The additional DV needed at perigee to place the ship in Marsbound<br />

trajectory is only 790 meters [0.79 km] per second.<br />

It is quite conceivable that lunar settlers may one day<br />

produce oxygen and aluminum propellants for departure stages<br />

of planet-bound spacecraft, maybe with Earth hydrogen added<br />

for extra performance. Lunar oxygen could well fill the oxidizer<br />

tanks of the interplanetary craft for the subsequent maneuvers<br />

in its itinerary. If the interplanetary ship designers select a<br />

tripropellant propulsion system, the ships may carry lunar<br />

aluminum as well, with only a small admixture of terrestrial<br />

hydrogen to boost specific impulse. Using lunar propellants<br />

along with launching and retrieving interplanetary flights at L1<br />

[3] could significantly reduce costs of interplanetary travel.<br />

Ways to Implement Lunar Aluminum/Oxygen Propellant Usage<br />

How are we to implement the use of lunar oxygen and<br />

aluminum propellants together? One way would be to pump<br />

aluminum powder as we do fluids. In this case, it will probably<br />

be necessary to use a carrier gas along with the powder to keep<br />

the aluminum grains from vacuum welding or sticking together<br />

from electrostatic forces. Here we could use lunar hydrogen<br />

implanted in soil grains by solar wind, because only a small<br />

amount is needed. The hydrogen for this function does not<br />

have to be a significant fraction of the propellant.<br />

Another technique is a hybrid rocket engine using<br />

solid aluminum and liquid oxygen. A conceptual design for<br />

such an engine was proposed by Brower et al. [1]. Their design<br />

calls for a hexagonal array of aluminum bars the length of the<br />

combustion chamber. Liquid oxygen would be fed down the<br />

bars for regenerative cooling before reaching the flame at the<br />

bar tips. The engine could use oxygen and aluminum only, or<br />

could use tripropellant operation with hydrogen.<br />

References<br />

[1] Brower, D., Adams, T. Kelly, C. Ewing, and T. Wiersema,<br />

“Conceptual Design of Hybrid Rocket Engines Utilizing<br />

Lunar-derived Propellant”, AIAA paper 90-2114, delivered at<br />

AIAA/SAE/ASME/ASEE 26th Joint Propulsion Conference,<br />

Orlando, FL, (July 16-18, 1990).<br />

[2] Cutler, Andrew Hall. “Aluminum Fueled Space Engines for<br />

Economical Lunar Transportation”. Lunar Bases and Space<br />

Activities of the 21st Century, W.W. Mendell, ed., Lunar and<br />

Planetary Institute, Houston, (1985) p. 61.<br />

[3] Friesen, Larry Jay, “Lagrange Point Staging for Lunar and<br />

Planetary Flight”, <strong>Moon</strong> Miners’ Manifesto, issue # 94. April<br />

1996, Milwaukee, WI. [Above, this <strong>MMM</strong> <strong>Classics</strong> #] LJF<br />

[EDITOR’S COMMENT: We thank Larry Jay Friesen for this<br />

excellent and enlightening pair of papers. However, Friesen’s<br />

remarks on lunar base siting call for comment.<br />

Those who do not foresee (or do not wish to speak to)<br />

the industrialization of the <strong>Moon</strong>, and are only trying to brainstorm<br />

the economics of renewed exploration activities, may<br />

indulge in the thought that efficient oxygen production is the<br />

only determinant of consequence when it comes to picking a<br />

site for a lunar base. But those of us who look forward to real,<br />

industrially self-supporting communities on the <strong>Moon</strong> must<br />

take a wider view. Lunar settlers will need access to all economically<br />

producible elements. From a lunar development point<br />

of view it is clear that we ought to put our outpost in a location<br />

from which both suites of materials (aluminum rich highlands,<br />

iron rich maria) can be accessed with equal ease - highlandmare<br />

“coasts!” This solution is so self-manifest that the very<br />

continuance of this debate exasperates! Those who come from<br />

different disciplines must talk to one another! PK<br />

<strong>Moon</strong> Miners’ Manifesto <strong>Classics</strong> - <strong>Year</strong> <strong>10</strong> - Republished January 2006 - Page 53

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