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Method of repurposing spacecraft dust as an agricultural material

Engineering & Physical Sciences
Energy, Earth, & Environmental
Environmental Remediation/Purification & Waste Management
Other
College
College of Engineering (COE)
Researchers
Nastasi, Nicholas
Dannemiller, Karen
Licensing Manager
Ashouripashaki, Mandana
5125867192
ashouri.2@osu.edu

T2024-108

The Need

In future decades, more people than ever will be spending time in space. Current crop production systems onboard spacecraft are not self-sustainable, relying on fertilizer and substrate materials that must be launched from Earth. These resupply missions can cost thousands of dollars per pound and are susceptible to delays. The future of a permanent human presence in space requires innovative breakthroughs in sustainable space agriculture.

The Technology

OSU inventors have developed a novel method that uses dust collected on the spacecraft as a nutrient source and root substrate for plant growth. This makes spaceflight more self-sustainable and less reliant on Earth-based materials, while also repurposing a waste product that would otherwise take up valuable storage space.

Benefits/Advantages

This technology offers several compelling benefits and advantages:

  • Cost-effective: Decreases reliance on launching new payloads of agricultural material from Earth.
  • Efficient: Uses less water compared to substrate-based methods.
  • Supports remote missions: Enables continuous plant production on space missions beyond low earth orbit, where resupply launches are not an option.

Provisional patent application filed