CAMBRIDGE,
Mass. -- Future explorers on the Moon and Mars could be
outfitted in lightweight, high-tech spacesuits that offer far more flexibility
than the bulky suits that have been used for spacewalks in the 1960s.
Research is under way at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT) on a Bio-Suit System that incorporates a suit designed to
augment a person's biological skin by providing mechanical counter-pressure. The
"epidermis" of such a second skin could be applied in spray-on fashion in the
form of an organic, biodegradable layer.
This coating would protect an astronaut conducting a
spacewalk in extremely dusty planetary environments. Incorporated into that
second skin would be electrically actuated artificial muscle fibers to enhance
human strength and stamina.
The Bio-Suit System could embody communications
equipment, biosensors, computers, even climbing gear for spacewalks or what NASA
calls an Extra Vehicular Activity (EVA).
"When we get back to the Moon and on Mars, we're not
going there to stay in a habitat," said Dava Newman, professor in the Department
of Aeronautics and Astronautics and Engineering Systems here at MIT. "EVA
becomes ... a primary function," she said.
Newman is leading the Bio-Suit System work, assisted
by researchers Kristen Bethke, Christopher Carr, Nicole Jordan, and Liang Sim in
the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics and Engineering Systems. The
study is multi-pronged and is intended to better calibrate astronaut
performance, explore improvements to current spacesuit designs and generate
novel ideas for a new generation of space exploration suits.
The NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts,
headquartered in Atlanta, is sponsoring the Bio-Suit System effort.
"We need to shrink-wrap the astronaut," Newman said.
"It would be like wearing a second skin."
The Bio-Suit System, Newman said, would provide life
support through mechanical counter pressure where pressure is applied to the
entire body through a tight-fitting suit with a pressurized helmet for the head.
Ongoing research is targeted at understanding, simulating, and predicting
capabilities of suited astronauts in a variety of scenarios -- be they performing
simple motions or more complex movement, such as overhead or cross-body reach,
stepping up, or trudging across an exotic landscape.
The scenario envisioned by Newman and her associates
is an astronaut first donning his or her customized elastic Bio-Suit layer. Then
a hard torso shell would be slipped on, sealed via couplings located at the
hips. A portable life support system is then attached mechanically to the hard
torso shell and provides gas counter pressure. Gas pressure would flow freely
into the wearer's helmet and down tubes on the bio-suit layer to the gloves and
boots.
Newman said that the spacesuits of today are very
limited in terms of mobility. In addition, the current weight or mass of EVA
suits is another limiting factor.
"In the
microgravity environment those limitations are not show-stoppers. But for an
advanced exploration spacesuit for the Moon or Mars, unlimited mobility and a
very low mass spacesuit are paramount," Newman told
SPACE.com
.
There are several advances in technology that Newman
and her MIT colleagues consider key in turning their work into a practical,
suitable suit for human space explorers.
"We're looking into cutting edge materials,
development and modeling capabilities to turn our Bio-Suit concepts in to
working prototypes implementing mechanical counter-pressure," Newman
advised.
Newman said Bio-Suit relies on advances in
fabrication and application of open cell foam, smart materials like advanced
"muscle wire" technologies, and electrospinlacing. "All of these have seen vast
improvements in the last few years," she said.
The MIT group has investigated unique modeling
techniques, such as taking 3D laser scans of a person. Then, using mathematical
modeling and mechanics techniques, a "stress-strain field calculation" is
performed for the entire human body.
"The modeling allows us to prescribe a minimum energy
suit that literally could be 'painted on' to provide maximum mobility for
extreme exploration required on the Moon or Mars," Newman said.
Lightweight and easy to don and doff, the bio-suit
layer would be custom fitted to each astronaut -- made possible by a laser
scanning/electrospinlacing process. That method stems from work at the U.S. Army
Soldier Systems Center in Natick, Mass. where researchers there are tapping into
science and technology for 21st century combat uniforms, as well as police
officer garb able to thwart chemical or biological agents.
In addition, the MIT Bio-Suit System team is working
with Mide Technology Corp. of Medford, Mass. to adopt such items as
micro-actuators and smart (active) materials in their designs.
Among other collaborations, Bio-Suit System
researchers are also drawing upon the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies, an
interdepartmental research center at MIT. The ultimate goal of that institute is
to create a 21st century battlesuit that combines high-tech capabilities with
light weight and comfort.
"The roadmap that the president and NASA have
established involves spiral development and multiple destinations and operating
environments over a relatively short period of time. With the very real budget
pressures we will all face, I think the most critical element for success will
be the early creation of an effective, modular EVA system architecture," said
Edward Hodgson, a Technical Fellow at Hamilton Sundstrand Space Systems
International in Windsor Locks, Conn.
Hodgson said an evolutionary approach will permit
changes in response to altering mission needs, and also to infuse new technology
as it develops with a minimum of system level redesign and
recertification.
Hodgson has also received support from the NASA
Institute for Advanced Concepts to study a "Chameleon Suit." The name reflects
the fact that walls of the suit change in response to variations in the
environment or in the wearer's need for cooling.
The ultimate goal of this concept is a symbiotic
interaction of astronaut and spacesuit like that between humans and terrestrial
plants in which the astronaut's waste carbon dioxide and water vapor are
converted back into respirable oxygen in the suit walls using environmental
energy sources.
Technologies under study, Hodgson noted, include
shape change polymers and electro-emissive materials to modify heat transfer
characteristics of the spacesuit skin so it is similar to that found in natural
biological systems.