Mining Solutions 
Space Exploration 
Lunar Regolith Simulant  
Product Development 
Annual Conference 
 
NORCAT Space Exploration

 
NORCAT has been developing space mining equipment since 1999, with the primary focus on a drilling unit for subsurface exploration.

The need for mining activity on other planets in support of both robotic and human activity is paramount. For example, in order to ensure a human mission can survive on the moon for more than 3 days (per Apollo program), it will be necessary to produce oxygen and water from the resources that are located at the moon.

This is called In Situ Resource Utilization.

The only resource known to be available is the lunar soil. There is some speculation that there may be water ice in permanently shadowed craters. In any case, the use of these resources for life support will require the excavation of the soil and processing to refine the materials out of the raw ore. It is, in reality, a mining process.
RESOLVE animation

  

Innovation Space Drilling

The Northern Centre for Advanced Technology (NORCAT), in partnership with Electric Vehicle Controllers Ltd. (EVC), and funded through various Canadian Space Agency projects, has developed a sample capture device (SCaD) and auger unit. When coupled to an all electric drill, also developed in house, the entire assembly is capable of acquiring subsurface samples without the use of down-the-hole electric components. NORCAT continues to work with both the Canadian Space Agency and NASA to develop planetary excavation equipment.

Along with the work in mining solutions, a number of earlier projects in the space exploration area form the foundation upon which continuing work of that nature rests. Some of these are described below.
TRL4 drill bit



trl4 and 3 stage auger Additional drill bits have been developed and patented with space exploration in mind. The patented TRL4 bit was developed for Mars to drill in unconsolidated and consolidated material, especially sedimentary rock. It has a narrow kerf. NORCAT worked with Dimatec to develop the drill bit and they have since marketed the resulting design to the petroleum industry for side wall drilling.

Early auger development determined the best flight pitch suited to remove material generated by the drill bit (cuttings) from the drill hole, and confirmed a three start auger to be superior to a single start auger.



The MM Class Rover Drill was an in-house project undertaken to develop a very small coring drill that could generate a core as small as 5 mm. The project was an exercise in scalability and proved that a valid hard rock dry drill could be developed that massed under 5 kg, drew less than 75 Watts of power and was capable of drilling basalt to develop a sample core. This project also included the development of additional drill bits which have also been patented.

The Mars Pre-phase A project included investigation into the geometries of bits in relation to downward force required to drill a hole, and comparison of surface set diamonds versus polycrystalline. The resulting patented bit was chosen for its best overall performance in sandstone, dolomite, and andesite.




Bit design was further advanced with the turbine bit in which the amount of downward force was distributed evenly over all cutting diamonds, and flights were timed to the auger to facilitate flow of cuttings up the auger.

A specially modified cryo temper unit, on loan from the Canadian Space Agency, has allowed NORCAT to perform some unique testing of down the hole equipment at lunar and Mars temperatures.
 

  Cryo Unit

  

autonomous drilling

Autonomy is a critical element for planetary exploration equipment. Machinery must be able to function with little or no operator interference in many situations, particularly on unmanned missions. NORCAT has been working closely with Xiphos Technologies Inc. in development of their Q-cards, small controllers that have many applications and are of interest to NORCAT for use in exploration equipment.

In the Q-Card Flight Readiness project, one of the goals was to integrate a modified Q-5 into an existing drill platform and then test its ability to control low level drill functions. The result was a reduction in control power requirements and a 75% reduction in controller size and mass.
  NORCAT, in partnership with Electric Vehicle Controllers Ltd. (EVC) completed an STDP (CSA’s Space Technology Development Program) project during which a Developer’s Toolkit was created for the Q-card from Xiphos Technologies Inc. (link). To effectively utilize the Q-card, it is necessary to use application design tools that operate on a level above the explicit coding. The Developer’s Toolkit allows users to actively and dynamically program and implement the Q-card controller.   ebrcu

  

RESOLVE project
 
ebrcu NORCAT / EVC has been working with NASA on the RESOLVE project since 2004 and continues to do so.

The RESOLVE project (Regolith and Environment Science and Oxygen and Lunar Volatile Extraction) is an experiment package designed to obtain ‘ground truth’ data to confirm the presence of hydrogen, potentially in the form of water ice, on the moon, as indicated by the Clementine and Lunar Prospector missions.

NORCAT’s
role is to develop an Excavation and Bulk Regolith Characterization (EBRC) Module – essentially a drill with sample capture and a particle size reduction unit. The drill has recently been integrated with a lunar rover built by Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics group to demonstrate integrated mobility and autonomous drilling.
  Drill on Rover
 
 


  

Mining Excavation

bucket Wheel   In addition to drills, NORCAT/EVC has developed excavation equipment. The Bucket Wheel Excavator was a prototype developed at Colorado School of Mines to demonstrate a method of continuous mining excavation. NORCAT’s role was to verify the CSM design and field test the bucketwheel to validate forces generated and power consumption predictions.

NORCAT is also currently involved in helping the University of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies (UTIAS) to develop a multi-agent teaming concept. A fleet of small autonomous rovers work together to accomplish a task, such as excavating a hole using artificial neural tissue – controllers which can ‘learn’ and adapt.
  excavators