Like many of the discussions here, this got me thinking. Could abundant oxygen production on the moon allow the use of simpler but less efficient life support systems?
I see a range of numbers, but a typical human breathing air exhales 4-5% CO2 and 15-16% O2. Since air is about 21% O2, this means that in a once-through scuba-type mode your oxygen efficiency would be about 25%. Assuming these figures would stay the same for pure O2 at reduced total pressure (i.e., same O2 partial pressure), you'd have to carry about 4x as much O2 as in a conventional rebreather-type life support system where the CO2, H2O and trace gases are scrubbed so the unbreathed O2 can be breathed again.
That's actually not bad considering how much you can get rid of: no CO2 absorption system, no water condenser/separator, no charcoal filter. Depending on the workload you might also be able to get rid of the cooling system too by relying on gas cooling supplemented by the heat of vaporization of LOX. (Gas cooling was the original plan for Apollo, but water cooling was added when studies showed that at very high workloads it would take less power to drive a water pump than a suit blower at the necessary speed.)
But it would require you to use a scuba-type mouthpiece or a small face mask to limit mixing between exhaled and inhaled air. If instead you simply purged the cabin continuously through a vent, assuming good ventilation keeping exhaled air thoroughly mixed in the cabin, your vent rate would depend on the maximum tolerable CO2 concentration. That appears to be about 1%, so to maintain that level you'd have to continuously vent CO2 as fast as its produced, and you'd have to vent roughly 99 times as much O2 along with it. (The actual figure is a bit better because CO2 has a higher molecular weight than O2.)
So if we take the oxygen efficiency of the conventional rebreather as 100%, the efficiency of a scuba system would be about 25% and that of a purged and vented cabin with ventilation would be about 1%. Still, if oxygen is truly plentiful -- and there's no reason to think that it wouldn't be on the moon -- this might be a worthwhile tradeoff to simplify the life support system, especially if it got rid of the need for other consumables that might not be as available. I know the ISS is now using a renewable CO2 scrubber, and I know that compact cooling systems that don't expend water are under development, but it would be even better if you could simply do without them.