<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/news/new-frontier-spaceships.html" dsn="news"><item_date>10/30/2020 12:00:00 AM</item_date><category_header/><title>New Frontier for Spaceships</title><subheader/><description/><author/><photographer> </photographer><image> </image><taxonomy-story-type/><taxonomy-cultural-story-category/><taxonomy-news-sections/><taxonomy-college-department>College of Engineering</taxonomy-college-department><taxonomy-tags>&lt;a href="/news-articles-tags/student-researchers"&gt;Student Researchers&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href="/news-tags/undergraduate-research"&gt;Undergraduate Research&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href="/news-tags/engineering"&gt;Engineering&lt;/a&gt;</taxonomy-tags><type>story</type><categories/><relationships/><main-content>
    
    
    
  
    
      

Alexander Sarvadi (’20) and his mentor Huseyin Bostanci, associate professor of engineering technology, believe they have found a better way to revitalize the air aboard spaceships — and NASA agrees. The two received a NASA Space Technology Graduate Research Opportunities grant that will provide up to $160,000 over two years for their research into the design and development of a “microgravity vortex phase separator for liquid amine CO2 removal system.” Sarvadi — who began graduate studies at UNT this fall and will work at NASA during the next two summers as part of the grant — and Bostanci propose to design and build a system using a microgravity vortex phase separator that could potentially offer a reliable, highthroughput flow and energy-efficient CO2 removal technology for future crewed space exploration missions.

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