2019 AIChE Annual Meeting
(519d) Renewable Power to Synfuels: Building on Solid Oxide Electrolysis Advances Developed for the Mars2020 Mission
Authors
Developing technology for production of oxygen for life support and ascent vehicle propellant oxidant is essentialin preparation for human expeditions to Mars. Solid oxide electrolysis (SOXE) stacks are capable of simultaneously reducing carbon dioxide and water extracted from the Mars atmosphere and near-surface regolith to produce high purity oxygen. Methane for ascent propellent can be produced from the SOXE byproduct CO and H2in a methanation reactor. OxEon is currently developing manned-mission scale SOXE stacks and methanation reactors as part of the NASA NextSTEP-2 ISRU program.
These same technologies are also being considered for use in storing nuclear and renewable electric power. Industrial scale installations of SOXE co-electrolysis process units coupled to methanation or Fischer-Tropsch synthesis reactors can convert bio-CO2to non-fossil methane, jet and diesel fuels compatible with the existing fossil-fuel. Power to fuels processes are energy intensive by design but are also extremely efficient with solid oxide electrolysis demonstrating 100% first law efficiency within the control volume of the SOXE stack. Power to fuels processes also create large dispatchable loads that can be used to balance grid operations against the intermittency of renewable energy sources.
Acknowledgement: NextSTEP ISRU work is supported under NASA Contract 8-HQTR19C0006. The work related to MOXIE was based on support from NASA through JPLâs prime contract, under JPL subcontract number 1515459.