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The Dust and Aerosol Measurement Feasibility
Test (DAFT) was designed to ensure that a modified P-Trak®—a
key component of the forthcoming NASA Smoke Aerosol Measurement
Experiment (SAME)—will perform properly in the unique environment
of microgravity. If the P-Trak® performs as expected, the
device will be used in SAME to provide data that will help scientists
design better fire detectors for future, longduration, manned
missions.
The Challenge
The P-Trak® is a commercial device
that counts ultrafine particles (it can recognize particles
as small as 0.02 micrometers in diameter). It works by passing
particulate-laden air through a heated chamber of vaporous isopropyl
alcohol. The individual particles serve as seeds around which
the alcohol condenses when cooled, forming droplets large enough
to be detected and counted as they scatter light from a laser
beam (see the schematic on the other side). The P-Trak®
must be tested in microgravity prior to its use in SAME because
its alcohol condenser was redesigned to work properly in microgravity.
(The original smooth-walled P-Trak® condenser—meant
for Earth based use—depends on gravity.) NASA scientists
modified the unit’s condenser by forming microgrooves
in its wall to increase the alcohol flow back to the wick
(see photo on right). This modification was based on the knowledge
gained from previous microgravity fluids physics experiments
conducted by researchers at NASA Glenn Research Center
The Plan
The main components of the
DAFT experiment, the P-Trak® and the DustTrak® aerosol monitoring
devices, were delivered to the International Space Station (ISS)
in February 2005. (The DustTrak® uses a sensor to determine
the intensity of light being scattered by particles and translates
that number into an aerosol mass measurement. It is being used to
test the accuracy of the P-Trak®
because it is insensitive to gravitational forces.) The rest set of
tests were conducted in February and March 2005 and the results were
encouraging. Importantly, the muddied condenser performed as expected.
The second set of tests will be conducted after the balance of DAFT
parts (including a calibrated aerosol source and an unmodified P-Trak®)
are delivered to the ISS.
Research Procedure
During
the ISS tests conducted in 2005, astronauts performed several
steps: 1. Turned on the P-Trak®
and the DustTrak® 2. Attached high-efficiency particulate air
(HEPA) filters to the inlets to “zero” the particle counters
(since the HEPA filter removes all airborne particles, if the particle
counters do not read “zero” something is amiss) 3. Connected
the devices to a common sampling hose 4. Recorded the ISS environment
for several minutes 5. Reconnected the HEPA filters to “zero” the
particle counters 6. Turned off the P-Trak® and the DustTrak® The
tests were conducted in the U.S. Laboratory Module Destiny in front
of EXPRESS Rack 4; in the modules’s aft end and port side and
in Node 1. (The EXPRESS Rack is a standardized payload rack system
that transports, stores, and supports experiments aboard the ISS.
Node 1 is a hub to which various modules are attached.) Three of the
tests sampled undisturbed cabin air; the other test validated the
instruments at high particulate levels by having an astronaut create
airborne debris at the P-Trak® and DustTrak® inlets by separating
pieces of Velcro®.
Results So Far
The three tests that sampled the undisturbed
environment in the ISS showed very low levels of airborne particulates,
averaging fewer than 0.005 mg/m3 from the DustTrak® and fewer
than 15 particles/cm3 from the P-Trak® (these are typical readings
at the baseline). These numbers are dramatically lower than the
values recorded in the space shuttle in an earlier experiment (~0.050
mg/m3). Lower levels are to be expected because the ISS has HEPA
filtration for the cabin air as compared to merely a fine screen
on the shuttle air handler. Furthermore, the typical shuttle crew
of seven astronauts generates more airborne particulate than an
ISS crew of two astronauts.
Future DAFT Tests
The next series of tests will take
place once the remaining DAFT equipment is delivered to the ISS.
These will be performed with Arizona Road Dust (ARD)—a standard
aerosol test material of known particle size and distribution—and
nitrogen aerosol inside a 15-liter Mylar® bag. Testing a known
particulate will allow scientists to establish definitively how
well the P-Trak® works in microgravity.
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The P-Trak® and its
components (clockwise from the left: alcohol wick, wick container,
container cap, P-Trak®, and battery pack). |
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A cross section of the modified
P-Trak® condenser chamber shows the microgrooves that NASA
engineers cut on the inside diameter to improve the flow of
alcohol back to the wick in microgravity. |
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An engineer holding the
DustTrak® (top) and the P-Trak® in their approximate
locations in the Expedite the Process of Experiments to Space
Station (EXPRESS) Rack (the blue velcro board has been superceded
by straps). |
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The DustTrak®—shown
here with its battery pack—is insensitive to gravitational
forces. It is used to determine the accuracy of the modified
P-Trak®. |
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