SBIR-STTR Award

Miniaturized Reagent Regenerative Ion Analyzer for Elemental Analysis
Award last edited on: 2/8/2023

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NASA : KSC
Total Award Amount
$999,998
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
S15.01
Principal Investigator
Jinseong Kim

Company Information

Lynntech Inc

2501 Earl Rudder Freeway South
College Station, TX 77845
   (979) 764-2200
   requests@lynntech.com
   www.lynntech.com
Location: Multiple
Congr. District: 10
County: Brazos

Phase I

Contract Number: 80NSSC22PB078
Start Date: 7/20/2022    Completed: 1/25/2023
Phase I year
2022
Phase I Amount
$149,999
NASA has been developing Bioregenerative Life Support Systems (BLSS) to contribute to life support, supplying food and oxygen, while removing carbon dioxide as complement of physical and chemical life support systems for the future space exploration, Martian missions, and the construction of lunar bases. As plant-growing systems mature and expand for future exploration missions, the ability to generate, analyze, and manage nutrient solutions is required. Thus., an in-situ capability is needed to analyze plant nutrient solutions or feed water to better understand and manage plant nutrient delivery on a near-real-time basis. The technology would need to be robust and miniaturized, operate with low power, and have minimal consumables to augment plant growth and research capabilities for the future missions. The system would also need to be safe for operating in spaceflight environments. Lynntech has previously developed a reagent-regenerative, microgravity-compatible, low-power ion analyzer (ion chromatograph). In addition to its advantages of high sensitivity and requiring neither sample preparation nor reagent resupply, it could be operated in microgravity and partial gravity. By adapting engineering advances carried out in Lynntech’s electrochemical devices, a miniaturized, robust, safe, ion analyzer will be developed that can be operated inline, eliminating the need for sample injection by astronauts. In the Phase I Lynntech will demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed approach with a breadboard system. An automated prototype will be delivered to NASA during Phase II. Potential NASA Applications (Limit 1500 characters, approximately 150 words): Direct NASA applications of the reagent-regenerative, microgravity-compatible, miniaturized ion analyzer (RMMIA) include the on-board elemental analysis device to analyze plant nutrient solutions or feed water to better understand and manage plant nutrient delivery on a near-real-time basis. The multi-analyte capability of the proposed technology will expand to measurements of ionic species in condensate, potable water, wastewater, byproducts of water treatment for manned space exploration missions beyond low Earth orbit. Potential Non-NASA Applications (Limit 1500 characters, approximately 150 words): Successful development of the reagent-regenerative, microgravity-compatible, miniaturized ion analyzer (RMMIA) as a portable device will have a high commercial applicability to a wide range of industries where water quality assurance and control is important, and where water quality analysis of inorganic pollutants in both environmental and potable water sources is critical. Duration: 6

Phase II

Contract Number: 80NSSC23CA114
Start Date: 7/24/2023    Completed: 7/24/2025
Phase II year
2023
Phase II Amount
$849,999
NASA has been developing Bioregenerative Life Support Systems (BLSS), supplying food and oxygen and removing carbon dioxide, as complement of physical and chemical life support systems for the future space exploration, Martian missions, and the construction of lunar bases. As plant-growing systems mature and expand for future exploration missions, the need to generate, analyze, and manage nutrient solutions will increase. Thus, an in-situ capability is needed to analyze, on a near-real-time basis, plant nutrient solutions or feed water in space missions to better understand and manage plant nutrient delivery. The technology would need to be robust and miniaturized, operate with low power, and have minimal consumables, in addition to meeting safety criteria. In a Phase I feasibility study, Lynntech successfully demonstrated a Reagent-regenerative, Microgravity-compatible, Miniaturized Ion Analyzer (RMMIA) as a potential onboard analyzer for the elemental composition of plant growth solutions. The Phase I study demonstrated the RMMIA’s feasibility by carrying out a laboratory evaluation of key components and device sub-assemblies, with performance testing using representative plant nutrient solutions. During the Phase II, an optimized RMMIA unit will be designed, fabricated, tested, and delivered to NASA. Testing will include nutrient solutions such as Hoagland solution. Deliverable items will demonstrate on-demand and in-line automated operation capabilities. Anticipated

Benefits:
Direct NASA applications of the reagent-regenerative, microgravity-compatible, miniaturized ion analyzer (RMMIA) include the on-board elemental analysis device to analyze plant nutrient solutions or feed water to better understand and manage plant nutrient delivery on a near-real-time basis. The multi-analyte capability of the proposed technology will expand to measurements of ionic species in condensate, potable water, wastewater, byproducts of water treatment for manned space exploration missions beyond low Earth orbit. Successful development of the reagent-regenerative, miniaturized ion analyzer (RMMIA) as a portable device will have a high commercial applicability to a wide range of industries where water quality assurance and control are vital, such as to monitor source and drinking water, wastewater, recycled water, and industrial effluent in many industries.