Asteroids Near Earth
  Lunar Materials
  Transportation
  Industrial Processes
     Index
     Environment
        Zero Gravity
        Vacuum
        Solar Ovens
        Solar Power
        Heat Rejection
     Simple Processing
        Magnetic Separation
Thermal Extraction
        Electrostatic
        Vibration/Floatation
        Electrophoresis
     Bulk Construction
        Overview
        Sintering
        Glass-ceramics
        Glasses
        Fiberglass
     Advanced Processing
        Electrolysis
        Smelting
        Distillation
        Chemical
     Refractories
     Waste Disposal
     Manufacturing
        Overview
        Vapor/Droplet
        Vacuum Cutting
        Vacuum Welding
        Containerless
        Powder Metallurgy
     Robotics
        Introduction
        Surface Exploration
        Mining
        Manufacturing
        Other Operations
        Other Websites
     Bootstrapping
  Products and Services
  Space Colonies
  Law - Govt vs Private
  Mission Concepts
  Business Plan
  Research Resources
  Articles and Essays
  To Do List

§ 4.2.2 Thermal Extraction of Volatiles

Asteroids are rich in volatile elements such as water, hydrogen, carbon, sulfur, and other elements. Extracting these is easy.

The material is channelled into a solar oven where the volatiles are cooked out. In zero gravity and windless space, the oven mirrors can be huge and made of aluminum foil. The gas stream is piped to tanks located in a cold shadow of space. The tanks are put in series so that the furthest one away is coldest. This way, water condenses more in the first one, whereas carbon dioxide and other vapors tend to migrate and condense in the tanks downstream.

Notably, rocket fuel for the delivery trip to Earth orbit can be produced by separating oxygen and hydrogen gases from the mix, or by electrolysis of water. Alternatively, the hydrogen could be chemically bonded with carbon to produce methane fuel.

Tanks for storing frozen volatiles for sending to Earth orbit can be manufactured by some of the free nickel iron metal, by use of a solar oven for melting the nickel iron metal. For example, a cast can be made from sand or glass-ceramic material from melted leftover ore. The tank doesn't need to be a highly pressurized tank, as the volatiles will be frozen to a very cold temperature in space. Alternatively, thin tanks could be sent, remanufactured from spent fuel tanks used to get to orbit from Earth. Or the spent fuel tanks could be sent as-is. The re-use of spent fuel tanks in space is discussed in the chapter on products and services.






































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