Latest and Trending News | Headlines & live UpdatesLatest and Trending News | Headlines & live Updates
  • National
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Gallery
    • Video Gallery
    • Cartoon Gallery
    • Photo Gallery
  • Forum
  • Write For Us
  • PODCAST
Follow Us on Twitter
Tweets by @india_aware
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Latest and Trending News | Headlines & live Updates Latest and Trending News | Headlines & live Updates
  • National
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Gallery
    • Video Gallery
    • Cartoon Gallery
    • Photo Gallery
  • Forum
  • Write For Us
  • PODCAST
Latest and Trending News | Headlines & live UpdatesLatest and Trending News | Headlines & live Updates
Home»Latest»Indian scientists, ISRO make space bricks with urea for buildings on Moon
Latest

Indian scientists, ISRO make space bricks with urea for buildings on Moon

Our CorrespondentBy Our CorrespondentAugust 15, 20201 Comment3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp
Share
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp

A team of researchers from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) and the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has developed a sustainable process for making brick-like structures on the moon, according to IISc.

It exploits lunar soil, and uses bacteria and guar beans to consolidate the soil into possible load-bearing structures, Bengaluru-based IISc said in a statement.

“These space bricks could eventually be used to assemble structures for habitation on the moons surface, the researchers suggest,” it said.

“It is really exciting because it brings two different fields biology and mechanical engineering together,” says Aloke Kumar, Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, IISc, one of the authors of two studies recently published in ”Ceramics International” and ”PLOS One”.

Space exploration has grown exponentially in the last century.

With Earth’s resources dwindling rapidly, scientists have only intensified their efforts to inhabit the moon and possibly other planets.

The cost of sending one pound of material to outer space is about ₹ 7.5 lakh, according to the statement.

The process developed by the IISc and ISRO team uses urea which can be sourced from human urine and lunar soil as raw materials for construction on the moon’s surface, it said.

This decreases the overall expenditure considerably. The process also has a lower carbon footprint because it uses guar gum instead of cement for support.

This could also be exploited to make sustainable bricks on Earth, it was stated.

Some micro-organisms can produce minerals through metabolic pathways.

One such bacterium, called ”Sporosarcina pasteurii” produces calcium carbonate crystals through a metabolic pathway called the ureolytic cycle: it uses urea and calcium to form these crystals as byproducts of the pathway.

“Living organisms have been involved in such mineral precipitation since the dawn of the Cambrian period, and modern science has now found a use for them,” says Mr Kumar.

To exploit this ability, Mr Kumar and colleagues at IISc teamed up with ISRO scientists Arjun Dey and I Venugopal. They first mixed the bacteria with a simulant of lunar soil.Then, they added the required urea and calcium sources along with gum extracted from locally-sourced guar beans.

The guar gum was added to increase the strength of the material by serving as a scaffold for carbonate precipitation.

The final product obtained after a few days of incubation was found to possess significant strength and machinability, the statement said.

“Our material could be fabricated into any free form shape using a simple lathe.This is advantageous because this completely circumvents the need for specialised moulds a common problem when trying to make a variety of shapes by casting.

This capability could also be exploited to make intricate interlocking structures for construction on the moon, without the need for additional fastening mechanisms,” explains Koushik Viswanathan, Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, IISc, another author.

The PLOSOnestudy, conceived by Rashmi Dikshit, a DBT-BioCARe Fellow at IISc, also investigated the use of other locally available soil bacteria in the place of’ ‘S.pasteurii”.

After testing different soil samples in Bengaluru, the researchers found an ideal candidate with similar properties:”Bacillus velezensis”.

Just a vial of ”S.pasteurii” can cost ₹ 50,000;’ ‘B. velezensis” on the other hand, is about ten times less expensive, the researchers say.

“We have quite a distance to go before we look at extra-terrestrial habitats.Our next step is to make larger bricks with a more automated and parallel production process,” says Mr Kumar.

“Simultaneously, we would also like to further enhance the strength of these bricks and test them under varied loading conditions like impacts and possibly moonquakes.”

Indian Scientists Moon Narendra Modi Space Bricks Urea
Share. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp
Our Correspondent

Related Posts

Financial Action Task Force condemns Pahalgam terror attack

June 17, 2025

India issues advisory to citizens to leave Tehran amid Iran-Israel tensions

June 17, 2025

PM Modi’s Canada visit: Indian community expresses hope for improvement in bilateral relations

June 17, 2025

Inauguration of Ayushman Arogya Mandirs in Delhi

June 17, 2025
View 1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Dfifbkmh on May 28, 2025 12:02 am

    Entdecken Sie die besten bewerteten Online-Casinos des Jahres 2025. Vergleichen Sie Boni, Spielauswahl und Vertrauenswürdigkeit der Top-Plattformen für sicheres und lohnendes SpielenCasino

    Reply

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Follow Us on Twitter
Tweets by @india_aware
Latest Posts

Financial Action Task Force condemns Pahalgam terror attack

June 17, 2025

India issues advisory to citizens to leave Tehran amid Iran-Israel tensions

June 17, 2025

PM Modi’s Canada visit: Indian community expresses hope for improvement in bilateral relations

June 17, 2025
Advertisement

India today is a dynamic and fast growing nation. For millennia, it has been the land that has nourished both mind and body. Its philosophy that stems from a prehistoric oral tradition has carried on through the ages, influencing and creating leaders that have changed the course of the world.

Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
Recent Post

Financial Action Task Force condemns Pahalgam terror attack

June 17, 2025

India issues advisory to citizens to leave Tehran amid Iran-Israel tensions

June 17, 2025

PM Modi’s Canada visit: Indian community expresses hope for improvement in bilateral relations

June 17, 2025
Twitter Timeline
Tweets by @india_aware
© 2018 India-Aware.com - Maintained and developed by India-Aware Team..
  • About Us
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.