Autonomous electrochemical system for ammonia oxidation reaction measurements at the International Space Station
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Published:2023-03-08
Issue:1
Volume:9
Page:
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ISSN:2373-8065
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Container-title:npj Microgravity
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language:en
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Short-container-title:npj Microgravity
Author:
Morales-Navas Camila, Martínez-Rodríguez Roberto A., Vidal-Iglesias Francisco J.ORCID, Peña ArmandoORCID, Soto-Pérez Joesene J., Trinidad PedroORCID, Solla-Gullón José, Tzvetkov Toshko, Doan Jonathan, Smotkin Eugene S.ORCID, Nicolau Eduardo, Feliu Juan M., Cabrera Carlos R.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractAn autonomous electrochemical system prototype for ammonia oxidation reaction (AOR) measurements was efficiently done inside a 4'' x 4'' x 8'' 2U Nanoracks module at the International Space Station (ISS). This device, the Ammonia Electrooxidation Lab at the ISS (AELISS), included an autonomous electrochemical system that complied with NASA ISS nondisclosure agreements, power, safety, security, size constrain, and material compatibility established for space missions. The integrated autonomous electrochemical system was tested on-ground and deployed to the International Space Station as a “proof-of-concept” ammonia oxidation reaction testing space device. Here are discussed the results of cyclic voltammetry and chronoamperometry measurements done at the ISS with a commercially available channel flow-cell with eight screen-printed electrodes, including Ag quasi-reference (Ag QRE) and carbon counter electrodes. Pt nanocubes in Carbon Vulcan XC-72R were used as the catalyst for the AOR and 2 μL drop of Pt nanocubes/ Carbon Vulcan XC-72R, 20 wt%, ink was placed on the carbon working electrodes and allowed to dry in air. After the AELISS was prepared for launch to the ISS, a 4 days delayed (2 days in the space vehicle Antares and 2 days space transit to the ISS) cause a slight shift on the Ag QRE potential. Nevertheless, the AOR cyclic voltametric peak was observed in the ISS and showed ca. 70% current density decrease due to the buoyancy effect in agreement with previous microgravity experiments done at the zero-g aircraft.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous),Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Materials Science (miscellaneous),Medicine (miscellaneous)
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