Remember, an electrolysis plant would be a big consumer of electricity. A vacuum pyrolysis plant would be a producer of electricity.The same heat that liberated oxygen from regolith could also be used to generate electricity.
Quote from: Warren Platts on 08/19/2011 06:39 pm[snip}I respectfully disagree. We can look to Earth technologies and use that as a guide. E.g., does solar thermal on Earth have a major mass/power advantage over PV? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there is a major mass advantage. Thus, there's no need for endless technology studies. Let's get the ball moving.This is an article about solar thermal generation of electricity on the Earth.http://www.thegreentechnologyblog.com/2010/sterling-technology-improves-efficiency-in-solar-thermal-electricity-productionThis is information on a 25 kW solar electric generator. On Earth it averages 26% efficiency.http://www.stirlingenergy.com/how-it-works.htmA lunar version would need to work over a much wider temperature range, higher incoming solar energy and a day that lasts a month.
[snip}I respectfully disagree. We can look to Earth technologies and use that as a guide. E.g., does solar thermal on Earth have a major mass/power advantage over PV? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there is a major mass advantage. Thus, there's no need for endless technology studies. Let's get the ball moving.
The same heat that liberated oxygen from regolith could also be used to generate electricity.
{snip}If we use heavy 1st generation landers of the DTAL variety that can land 20 mT at a time, then that's 115 cargo flights. This doesn't take into account the equipment for the mining operation, habs, etc.Assuming 2 cargo flights per year, it would take 57 years to deposit all the equipment for the regolith processing plant.
Quote from: Warren Platts on 08/20/2011 03:57 pm{snip}If we use heavy 1st generation landers of the DTAL variety that can land 20 mT at a time, then that's 115 cargo flights. This doesn't take into account the equipment for the mining operation, habs, etc.Assuming 2 cargo flights per year, it would take 57 years to deposit all the equipment for the regolith processing plant. That is because you are over specifying the initial plant. The ability to make 2 mirrors and supports in a year using local material is all that is needed.11*2 + 1 = 33*2 + 3 = 99 *2 + 9 = 2727*2 + 27 = 81and so onso after 5 years 81 * 25 kW = 2,025 kWA lot can be done with 5 MW of power.Things are even better if the Stirling engines and tracking motors can also be manufactured locally.
OK, well if magic manufacturing is allowed, let's make a gigantic SBSP array for Earth from Lunar materials. All our energy problems will be solved!
You're still handwaving away the cooling cycle of your Stirling engines. On Earth they use radiators similar to automobile radiators. So you're stuck either trying to radiate the waste heat into a pure vacuum (the best insulator in the world) or geothermal, which requires a lot of pipes and trenches or else drilling equipment and lots of pipes.
Let's see!The Moon is rich in hydrogen at the poles (frozen water). There's your fuel.There's plenty of oxygen on the Moon.There's your oxidizer. Electrolysis is straight forward, reliable and a 200 year old technology.I seem to recall carrying out electrolysis in high-school chemistry. The Moon's surface receives an abundant supply of energy (1400 watts/meter^2)If you combine solar heating with electrolysis, you can extract and isolatea variety of elements, besides oxygen.
Quote from: Warren Platts on 08/20/2011 07:13 pmOK, well if magic manufacturing is allowed, let's make a gigantic SBSP array for Earth from Lunar materials. All our energy problems will be solved! You are part of the problem, not part of the solution.
You can't then turn around and say, well, we'll just make our own mirrors etc. out of regolith.
{snip}From eavesdropping various conversations, I believe 100 watts per kilogram solar arrays are doable and perhaps 150 watts per kilogram in the near future.But I still have no idea how many thermal watts per kilogram the mirrors can provide.
Quote from: Hop_David on 08/21/2011 03:50 pm{snip}From eavesdropping various conversations, I believe 100 watts per kilogram solar arrays are doable and perhaps 150 watts per kilogram in the near future.But I still have no idea how many thermal watts per kilogram the mirrors can provide. From the Wikipedia article on 'Mirror' when the reflective surface is on the front technical mirrors “achieve reflectivities of 90–95% when new”.Using a solar constant of 1.366 kW/m˛ at the lunar equator.Mylar is 7 gm/m2 (=0.007 kg/m2)Tent poles 2.10 m tall 2 off mass is 2 kgRef: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Vango-King-Pole-Set-210cm/dp/B001T2XUN2/ref=pd_sim_sbs_lp_4So a 2 square metre mirror with supports will mass (0.007 * 2 * 2) + 2 = 2.028 kgMax energy produced is 1.366 * 2 * 2 * 0.9 = 4.9176 kW (or 4917 W)Giving maximum thermal watts per kilogram 4917/2.028 = 2424 W/kgI suspect that lighter poles can be used on the Moon.
You ever fooled around with mylar? I got news for ya: you can see through it. So you're not going to get the reflectivity of a good glass mirror. Moreover, the stuff is crinkly as hell. It will not focus anywhere near as well as shaped glass mirrors. Just think of the mass they could have saved on the Hubble Space Telescope if they had only used mylar instead of glass! But there's a reason they didn't. Mylar's good for one thing in space: providing shade. That's about it.
Quote from: Warren Platts on 08/20/2011 07:13 pmOK, well if magic manufacturing is allowed, let's make a gigantic SBSP array for Earth from Lunar materials. All our energy problems will be solved! It is called a self-replicating machine. Bringing everything from Earth will make Moon and Mars bases too expensive.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-replicating_machineEven 80% self-replication with ISRU materials will give major benefits.
OK fine: for the sake of the argument, let's put everything on hold until we spend enough billions to create magic Von Neuman machines. That still begs the question of whether solar thermal vacuum pyrolysis of regolith is a more advisable means of obtaining propellant than say, hydrolysis of Lunar water using PV arrays.
Max energy produced received is 1.366 * 2 * 2 * 0.9 = 4.9176 kW (or 4917 W)
From the Wikipedia article on 'Mirror' when the reflective surface is on the front technical mirrors “achieve reflectivities of 90–95% when new”.Using a solar constant of 1.366 kW/m˛ at the lunar equator.Mylar is 7 gm/m2 (=0.007 kg/m2)Tent poles 2.10 m tall 2 off mass is 2 kgRef: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Vango-King-Pole-Set-210cm/dp/B001T2XUN2/ref=pd_sim_sbs_lp_4So a 2 square metre mirror with supports will mass (0.007 * 2 * 2) + 2 = 2.028 kg