Researchers can make fuel from moon dust using old satellites

Reseachers can make fuel from moon dust

Researchers can make fuel from moon dust using old satellites

A new research study shows researchers can make fuel from moon dust or soil with the help of old satellites existing in space. Researchers from LEER propose to create fuel from the moon’s top layer of soil and dust.

LEER refers to the University of Waterloo’s Laboratory for Emerging Energy Research. They consider moon soil a locally accessible resource that can be processed into useful materials to support life, produce energy (fuel), and create long-term habitats.

Researchers can produce fuel from moon dust by conducting chemical reactions on its soil

Connor MacRobbie is the lead author of this research study. According to Connor, moon soil and dust (regolith) contain numerous metallic dust embedded with oxygen.

They can use it to generate thermal energy instead of utilizing surrounding air since it already includes oxygen. They can perform thermite or chemical reactions on moon regolith in space to produce energy sources.


Researchers experimented with fake regoliths having properties like the moon’s surface to make the thermite reaction work best to produce fuel. They conducted their experiment in a combustion chamber that resembled the moon’s surface. They built this regolith based on data acquired from old satellites orbiting moon in space.

Researchers from the Univerisity of Waterloo experimented with a moon-like regolith in a combustion chamber

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John Wen is a co-author of this research study and director of LEER. According to John, the results of their experiment show the possibility of the moon’s topsoil power lunar development.

It can also enable humans to explore and inhabit the moon’s surface by utilizing the potential production of fuel on it. John also stated they are working tirelessly to improve the extraction of metal and other usable material from the moon regolith.

Hence, they aim to build automated methods in partnership with Canadian and international researchers. It also shows the potential that researchers can make fuel from moon dust.

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