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- Xref: sparky sci.space:18907 alt.sci.planetary:476 sci.chem:5691 sci.engr.chem:656
- Newsgroups: sci.space,alt.sci.planetary,sci.chem,sci.engr.chem
- Path: sparky!uunet!techbook!szabo
- From: szabo@techbook.com (Nick Szabo)
- Subject: Microreactors for processing native materials
- Message-ID: <C0HG12.Mw3@techbook.com>
- Organization: TECHbooks --- Public Access UNIX --- (503) 220-0636
- Date: Thu, 7 Jan 1993 12:00:33 GMT
- Lines: 157
-
- Using materials native to space, instead of hauling everything
- from Earth, is crucial to future efforts at large-scale space
- industrialization and colonization. At that time we will be
- using technologies far in advance of today's, but even now
- we can see the technology developing for use here on earth.
-
- There are a myriad of materials we would like to process,
- including dirty organic-laden ice on comets and some asteroids,
- subsurface ice and the atmosphere of Mars, platinum-rich
- unoxidized nickel-iron metal regoliths on asteroids, etc.
- There are an even wider array of materials we would like to
- make. The first and most important is propellant, but
- eventually we want a wide array of manufacturing and
- construction inputs, including complex polymers like Kevlar
- and graphite epoxies for strong tethers.
-
- The advantages of native propellant can be seen in two
- recent mission proposals. In several Mars mission proposals
- [1], H2 from Earth or Martian water is chemically processed
- with CO2 from the Martian atmosphere, making CH4 and O2
- propellants for operations on Mars and the return trip to Earth.
- Even bringing H2 from Earth, this scheme can reduce the propellant
- mass to be launched from Earth by over 75%. Similarly, I
- have described a system that converts cometary or asteroidal
- ice into a cylindrical, zero-tank-mass thermal rocket.
- This can be used to transport large interplanetary payloads,
- including the valuable organic and volatile ices themselves
- into high Earth and Martian orbits.
-
- Earthside chemical plants are usually far too heavy to launch
- on rockets into deep space. An important benchmarks for plants
- in space is the thruput mass/equipment mass, or mass thruput
- ratio (MTR). At first glance, it would seem that almost any system
- with MTR>1 would be worthwhile, but in real projects risk must be
- reduced through redundancy, time cost of money must be accounted for,
- equipment launched from earth must be affordable in the first
- place (typically <$5 billion) and must be amortized, and
- propellant burned must be accounted for. For deep-space
- missions, system MTRs typically need to be in the 100-10,000
- per year range to be economical.
-
- A special consideration is the operation of chemical reactors
- in microgravity. So far all chemical reactors used in
- space -- mostly rocket engines, and various kinds of life
- support equipment in space stations -- have been designed
- for microgravity. However, Earthside chemical plants incorporate
- many processes that use gravity, and must be redesigned.
- Microgravity may be advantageous for some kinds of reactions;
- this is an active area of research. On moons or other plants,
- we are confronted with various fixed low levels of gravity
- that may be difficult to design for. With a spinning tethered
- satellite in free space, we can get the best of all worlds:
- microgravity, Earth gravity, or even hypergravity where desired.
-
- A bigger challenge is developing chemical reactors that
- are small enough to launch on rockets, have high enough
- thruput to be affordable, and are flexible enough to
- produce the wide variety of products needed for space
- industry. A long-range ideal strategy is K. Eric
- Drexler's nanotechnology [2]. In this scenario small
- "techno-ribosomes", designed and built molecule by molecule,
- would use organic material in space to reproduce themselves
- and produce useful product. An intermediate technology, under
- experimental research today, uses lithography techniques
- on the nanometer scale to produce designer catalysts and
- microreactors.
-
- Lithography, the technique which has made possible the rapid
- improvement in computers since 1970, has moved into the deep
- submicron scale in the laboratory, and will soon be moving
- there commercially. Lab research is also applying lithography
- to the chemical industry, where it might enable breakthroughs to
- rival those it produced in electronics.
-
- Tim May has described nanolithography that uses linear arrays of
- 1e4-1e5 AFM's that would scan a chip and fill in detail to 10 nm
- resolution or better. Elsewhere I have described a class
- of self-organizing molecules called _nanoresists_, which make
- possible the use of e-beams down to the 1 nm scale. Nanoresists
- range from ablatable films, to polymers, to biological
- structures. A wide variety of other nanolithography techniques
- are described in [4,5,6].
-
- Small-scale lithography not only improves the feature density of
- existing devices, it also makes possible a wide variety of new
- devices that take advantage of quantum effects: glowing nanopore
- silicon, quantum dots ("designer atoms" with programmable
- electronic and optical properties), tunneling magnets, squeezed
- lasers, etc. Most important for our purposes, they make possible
- to mass production of tiny chemical reactors and designer catalysts.
-
- Lithography has been used to fabricate a series of catalytic
- towers on a chip [3]. The towers consist of alternating
- layers of SiO2 4.1 nm thick and Ni 2-10 nm thick. The deposition
- process achieves nearly one atom thickness control for both SiO2 and Ni.
-
- Previously it was thought that positioning in three dimensions
- was required for good catalysis, but this catalyst's nanoscale 1-d
- surface force reagants into the proper binding pattern. It
- achieved six times the reaction rate of traditional cluster catalysts
- on the hydrogenolysis of ethane to methane, C2H6 + H2 --> 2CH4.
- The thickness of the nickel and silicon dioxide layers can be varied
- to match the size of molecules to be reacted.
-
- Catalysts need to have structures precisely designed
- to trap certain kinds of molecules, let others flow through,
- and keep still others out, all without getting clogged or
- poisoned. Currently these catalysts are built by growing
- crystals of the right spacing in bulk. Sometimes catalysts
- come from biotech, for example the bacteria used to grow
- the corn syrup in soda pop. Within this millenium (only 7.1
- years left!) we will start to see catalysts built by new
- techniques of nanolithography, including AFM machining,
- AFM arrays and nanoresists Catalysts are critical to the oil industry,
- the chemical industry and to pollution control -- the worldwide
- market is in the $100's of billions per year and growing rapidly.
-
- There is a also big market for micron-size chemical reactors.
- We may one day see the flexible chemical plant, with hundreds of
- nanoscale reactors on a chip, the channels between them
- reprogrammed via switchable valves, much as the circuits
- on a chip can be reprogrammed via transitors. Even a
- more modest, large version of such a plant could have a
- wide variety of uses.
-
- Their first use may be in artificial organs to produce
- various biological molecules. For example, they might replace or
- augment the functionality of the kidneys, pancreas, liver, thyroid
- gland, etc. They might produce psychoactive chemicals inside the
- blood-brain barrier, for example dopamine to reverse Parkinson's
- disease. Biological and mechanical chemical reactors might
- work together, the first produced via metaboic engineering[7],
- the second via nanolithography.
-
- After microreactors, metabolic engineering, and nanoscale catalysts
- have been developed for use on Earth, they will spin off for use in
- space. Microplants in space could manufacture propellant, a wide variety
- of industrial inputs and perform life support functions more efficiently.
- Over 95% of the mass we now launch into space could be replaced by these
- materials produced from comets, asteroids, Mars, etc. Even if Drexler's
- self-replicating assemblers are a long time in coming, nanolithographed
- tiny chemical reactors could open up the solar system.
-
- ====================
- ref:
- [1] _Case for Mars_ conference proceedings, Zubrin et. al.
- papers on "Mars Direct"
- [2] K. Eric Drexler, _Nanosystems_, John Wiley & Sons 1992
- [3] Science 20 Nov. 1992, pg. 1337.
- [4] Ferry et. al. eds., _Granular Nanoelectronics_, Plenum Press 1991
- [5] Geis & Angus, "Diamond Film Semiconductors", Sci. Am. 10/92
- [6] ???, "Quantum Dots", Sci. Am. 1/93
- [7] Science 21 June 1991, pgs. 1668, 1675.
-
-
- --
- Nick Szabo szabo@techboook.com
-