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China Pursues Helium-3 on the Moon
by Staff Writers for Launchspace
Bethesda MD (SPX) Dec 17, 2021

illustration only

Apparently, China sees the Moon as a future source of fuel for terrestrial power and space dominance. At the moment Chinese nuclear scientists are studying lunar surface material samples brought back by its Chang'e 5 lunar exploration mission late last year. One sample is believed to contain helium-3, an isotope.

This particular isotope is very rare on Earth, but thought to be abundant in lunar surface material. Verification of the presence of helium-3 could be very important, because helium-3 is thought to be the ideal future fuel for fusion reactors.

In fact, over the past few decades lunar helium-3 has been cited as a major reason to return to the Moon. However, little research has been conducted on the complete potential of lunar helium-3 mining.

One study, complete about seven years ago, of an end-to-end process for mining and delivering helium-3 to terrestrial reactors assumed a set of requirements for creating 10% of the global energy demand by 2040.

The assumed mission architecture included individual transportation elements such as Earth-to-LEO, LEO-to-lunar-orbit and lunar-orbit-to-lunar-surface. However, it was concluded that the most critical mission element was the lunar mining operation.

This study concluded that to supply 10% of the global energy demand by 2040, roughly 200 tons of Helium-3 would be required annually. To do this would require a regolith mining rate of about 630 tons per second. This number is based on an optimistic concentration of 20 ppb helium-3 in the lunar regolith. All this translates to a requirement of between 1,700 to 2,000 helium-3 mining vehicles.

Based on these numbers, the required power for mining operations would be as high as 39 GW, with a resulting power system mass of the order of 60,000 to 200,000 tons. To support the mining operation, a fleet of three lunar ascent/descent vehicles and 22 continuous-thrust orbit-transfer vehicles would be needed. And the expected annual costs are in the trillion-dollar range. Needless to say, this is one big idea that will require a BIG program.


Related Links
Lunar Exploration and Space Program
Launchspace
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com


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Charged particle accelerators have been a central tool of basic physics research for almost a hundred years, perhaps most famously as "atom smashers" for understanding the elementary constituents of the universe. As accelerators have progressed to ever higher energies to probe ever smaller constituents, they have grown to enormous size: the Large Hadron Collider is a remarkable 27 kilometers in circumference. Recently, however, researchers at the University of Maryland have used intense lasers and ... read more

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