Courtesy Elmar Prennar
Aug. 7, 2024
UCalgary team selected as semi-finalist in national challenge to purify moon water
Water is a critical resource on Earth and in space, but it鈥檚 expected any water source on the moon would contain contaminants.
That鈥檚 why the and launched the which called on Canadian innovators to develop solutions to purify moon water. Eight organizations, including a 六九色堂 team, have been named as semi-finalists.
鈥淚t鈥檚 working with a group of people I have worked with over many years,鈥 says a professor of Biological Sciences in the who鈥檚 leading the UCalgary team.
His team also includes Murray Paulson of Starlight Technical Services, Kirat Singh of APNI Technology Corporation and John Murphy of Bio-Stream Diagnostics Inc.
Prenner says their project 鈥 called Pure Water from Lunar Ice: Advancing Water Purification in Space 鈥斅爄nvolves applied science rather than his regular research areas.
鈥淢urray is a space buff and so, when we saw this, we thought it was totally different, it鈥檚 interesting, let鈥檚 try,鈥 he says.
Purifying any water that exists on the moon would be critical to future space missions to support the production of food, oxygen and rocket fuel.
鈥淭hey found ice, but it鈥檚 not just ice,鈥 Prenner explains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 ice mixed with various frozen toxic gases 鈥 so they want to have pure water. One litre of water per hour.鈥
His team of biochemists and physicists is working on a system to zap moon dust with microwaves, freeze out chemicals for future use and collect pure water.
鈥淲hat we proposed was basically a unit in several stages that would use evaporation, separation by physical principles and condensate to test for purity,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e want to make sure it鈥檚 just water.鈥
Prenner doesn鈥檛 want to reveal too much, because it聽滨厂听a competition, but he notes that the project builds on the university鈥檚 strategy of being entrepreneurial and working with companies on applied science. UCalgary is the No. 1 startup creator among Canadian research institutions, three years in a row.
The other semi-finalists in the Aqualunar Challenge include several technology companies, the Canadian Space Mining Corporation, and a team from McGill University.
Each of the teams received $22,500 to develop the key components of their prototypes and participate in an 鈥渋nnovator bootcamp鈥 in Montreal later this year.
They are competing for $105,000 in grant funding and the opportunity to become one of four finalists in spring 2025. The grand prize winner, which receives $400,000, will be selected by spring 2026.
The Canadian Space Agency says the technology could also be used to help advance water purification on Earth.
Canadian Space Agency archive