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This is interesting.
https://evidencenetwork.ca/germany-is-m … ar-fusion/
The Germans have invested hundreds of millions of euros into inertial confinement fusion using femtosecond lasers. ICF uses lasers to heat the surface of a frozen pellet of hydrogen isotopes. As the surface heats up, x-ray pressure sends shockwaves through the interior of the pellet and the outer layers ablate off. The laser drivers used up to now, have delivered the energy to the pellet surface slowly. The problem is that plasma ablated from the pellet tends to shield the surface from recieving additional laser light. This makes laser drivers relatively inefficient. Femtosecond lasers could substantially improve driver efficiency as energy is delivered to the surface before a plasma bubble can form around the pellet.
The National Ignition Facility, without the benefit of femtosecond lasers, made history in 2022, by generating 3.15MJ of fusion energy from 2MJ of laser energy. The low efficiency of lasers means that this is nowhere near breakeven from a net energy perspective. But if driver efficiency can be improved through use of femtosecond lasers, it should take this technology much closer to net energy breakeven. If femtosecond lasers allow overall breakeven to be reached, then ICF will be efficient enough to provide a neutron source for breed and burn hybrid fusion fission reactors. This would dramatically improve the sustainability of the fission fuel cycle, whilst avoiding the need for reprocessing.
Peter Zeihan pointed out that there is nowhere near sufficient gold in reserves to cover the value of trade that modern economies undertake. This is a fair enough point. Traditionally, the currencies were e changeable for gold and silver. But even though they were theoretically exchangeable, very few people ever took a pound note to the Bank of England and demanded a pound of silver. In the modern world, we could base the value of a currency on a basket of non-perishable commodities. Instead of the promiss to pay 1 pound sterling, our banks would pay one pound sterling or its equivelent value in other non-perishables. This could be gold, silver, copper, aluminium ingots, pig iron, gem stones, rare earths, ethanol, oil, etc. Gold and silver are always better from the point of view of being value-dense and easy to ship for barter. But 100te of pig iron still has the same value as 1kg of gold. Others have suggested that currency could be valued in energy units. This may make more sense, as wealth is very much a product of energy and energy use scales with GDP.
Previously, we examined building a 200m wide catenary dome from Martian bricks as the site of a town hoysing 3000 - 10,000 people, depending upon the density of construction. I wonder if a steel structure would be quicker and easier to produce? Repeatable hexagonal units can be produced in large numbers. These can be welded into a frame structure that is then covered in loose rocks and regolith.
We will need fuels for a variety of different applications. Rocket vehicles and long-range ground vehicles will need high energy density fuels like methane or ethanol. But we also need vehicles that can do work close to the base, shifting soil, digging and transporting materials and equipment. We also need CO as reducing agent for iron ore and in brick manufacture. Burning CO with O2, also provides the high temperatures needed to turn carbonate into lime. Important if we want concrete. If CO is more energy efficient to produce than liquid methane, then I think it likely that we will be producing a great deal of it for a lot of applications. We won't just be producing one type of fuel.
Before the development of North Sea natural gas, most commercial and industrial gas used in the UK, was town gas. This was a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide, with smaller amounts of methane, heavier hydrocarbons and contaminant gases like CO2 and N2. This was stored in huge steel telescopic tanks at close to atmospheric pressure. I wonder if something similar will be done on Mars. CO and O2 could be stored in polymer bags under light pressure. The bags would be protected from damage and will be provided with external pressurisation, by housing them in steel tanks which are then covered in Martian soil for pressure ballast.
Duckweed!
https://youtu.be/U_405zhZkbY
This is a small, floating family of plants that is regularly eaten in eastern countries but is considered to be pond scum in the west. By my calculations, 1kg of wet yield contains 430 calories. Average productivity is around 20kg/m2/year. So an 84m2 pond would produce enough calories to feed 1 person indefinitely. More interesting is that some species are about 40% protein by weight, making this 10x more productive than the equivelent area of soybeans. What is more, duckweed contains all nine essential amino acids. This means you can build muscle by eating duckweed without supplementing it with anything else. It is also a vegetable source of vitamin B12 and omega-3 fatty acid. Some varieties are high in starch, allowing dried and powdered duckweed to be blended with wheat flour to make bread. This is more nutritious and healthy than standard bread.
These floating plants are about the size of sand grains. We could pump floating duckweed through transparent pipes on the Martian surface. Martian CO2 could be injected into the water and the plants would convert it into biomass. The water can be warmed using nuclear waste heat. This allows the wasteheat radiators of Martian nuclear reactors to serve as an abundant food source. To feed a city of 1million people would need an area of some 84km2. That is a square about 9km (5.5 miles) aside. This is more compact than most cities with a population of 1million. Presumably, water with dissolved acetate salts would grow duckweed without sunlight. In this case, our food production could take place in a compact facility using nuclear power. But as nuclear reactors need waste heat radiators anyway, why not use them to grow duckweed in sunlight and then use the electric power for other purposes?
Human waste can be recycled very efficiently in this arrangement. Waste would first enter an añaerobic digester, producing methane as a fuel. When fully digested, the waste breaks down into water with dissolved nutrients and an organic sludge which seperates by gravity. The water can be pumped back into the duckweed farm. The organic sludge would be added to martian regolith and used to make soil. Nothing gets wasted in this arrangement.
Duckweed is a photosynthetic plant. It is therefore a potential source of chloroplasts, which Robert has discussed as a means to produce oxygen and glucose in compact volumes. The glucose can be added to foods to boost calorie content. It can also be fermented into alcohol. This will have uses as a fuel, a low temperature working fluid, a screenwash for vehicles, solar panels and greenhouses and for human consumption. Over time, we may find ways of using alcohol, yeasts and algae to make rum and whisky that we can export to Earth. This was my original hacienda idea.
Why I'm obssessed with the moon.
https://youtu.be/8le1kudhVNQ
Quite inspiring. The moon is the key to building a spacefaring society.
The End of China's Rise and the Future of World Order.
https://youtu.be/IL6OHMr21f8
As Chinese economic power declines, it becoming increasingly aggressive.
Some pics:

This video discusses rope drives.
https://youtu.be/C-WxGuZhCuk
One thing I find interesting is that a single pulley can drive several rope drives for different machines.
The machine is now fully operational. I have built a tumbling machine that is connected to the clutch. It is quite windy at present and the machine is working well. I will check on the progress of the stones early next week.
To make carbon monoxide, carbon must be burned in an atmosphere with limited oxygen. This releases about 20% of the heat released by complete combustion. The process that Kbd512 has described produces particles of carbon. So that is what we start with. Carbon monoxide has important uses of its own. One such use is the production of reduced iron. Making strong engineering bricks is another use we have noted. But it is a precursor to other more convenient fuels. For example:
CO + H2O + heat = CO2 + H2
2H2 + CO = CH3OH.
This is methanol. It is a clean burning liquid fuel that doesn't freeze until -97°C. We could store it in tanks on Mars with very little pressurisation. By using the appropriate catalyst, methanol can form dimethyl ether:
2CH3OH = H20 + H3C-O-CH3.
Dimethyl ether has been considered as a diesel substitute. It would make an energy dense rocket fuel that is less volatile than methane.
This design can be built Horizontal or vertical in form https://www.instructables.com/55-Gallon-Drum-Turbine/
This is the kind of machine that I would choose to build if I could repeat the process. A much simpler machine, easier to build, able to accept wind from any direction and although slightly less efficient, it has more starting torque than the horizontal axis machines. That is important, because the rope drive and any machinery attached to the clutch, will have considerable internal friction. So efficiency is about more than just aerodynamics.
Update: Today I attached the rope drive and the clutch. It seems to be working as intended. Aside from cosmetic changes and the balancing of the machine, it is now finished.
SpaceNut, that is excellent research. To produce actual Earth daylight effect sounds quite energy intensive, given that a sunny day in the northern hemisphere delivers a ground level solar flux of ~400W/m2. For a 31,000m2 town, that implies 12.4MW of light, requiring ~5x that much power (60MW) in input electricity. That is a lot of juice and a heavy burden on base power supply. Averaged over 24 hours, that is 20MW of input power. It is also a lot of heat that must be removed from the space. It might be considered acceptable if it proves to have strong benefits for the mental health of residents. I wonder how much we can compromise in terms of power consumption by eliminating frequencies that are beyond human eyesight? Lighting for plants tends to be optimised for specific spectra that are most efficiently absorbed for photosynthesis. How well will humans adapt if the daylight they experience is a different colour, i.e more shifted towards the red spectrum?
It occurs to me that daylight we experience here on Earth has considerable daily fluctuation. Some days are overcast, others provide full sun and often the weather changes throughout the day. Lighting in the habitat could be turned into a kind of dump load for excess power.
The rotor is turning now.
There remains much to do. The rotor must be balanced, the bearing caps must be installed and any damaged surfaces must be painted. Finally, the rope drive must be installed. This is going to take a while. I would like to finish by next sunday. I will see how it goes.
The pressure-brick method could be used to produce green bricks prior to firing. A sieve could be used to seperate Martian fines from the regolith. Fines would then be compacted into moulds producing the green brick. This avoids the need for water. Blue Class A engineering bricks must be baked at a temperature of 1200°C in a reduced atmosphere.
https://wordssidekick.com/what-temperat … ering.html
If we are using a lot of bricks, then we could even supply this heat directly using a gas-cooled nuclear reactor. The reactor would charge the kiln with a mixture of carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide at 1200°C. Some sort of pebble bed reactor would be ideal here. These high-temperature reduced iron bricks, would be extremely strong. Iron rich clay is needed to produce bricks of this type. Fortunately, Mars is covered in exactly this material.
A currency based upon non-perishable commodities would appear to me to be a good idea. Metals are an obvious choice. They have value because of the energy needed to mine and refine them. Fiat currencies are prone to inflationary pressures. This tends to destroy the value of long term investments, because the rate of return always has to exceed baseline inflation. If inflation were always guarenteed to be zero, then people could confidently make investments knowing that their grandchildren will reap returns. That will be important for projects that take a long time to finalise, like terraforming for example. Or building capital intensive but long-lived infrastructure.
Any sort of cash based financial system is cumbersome, but it has the advantage that transactions are private from overbearing authorities that wish to control people. These may be financial institutions or governments themselves. In both cases, human liberty is at risk. Remember how easy it was for that snake Trudeau to freeze the bank accounts of the truckers?
It would be interesting to know how the 230kWh of electrical energy are consumed. Is this used in gathering and compressing the CO2? Is it the motor seperating the carbon flakes? On Mars, the ambient atmosphere is typically cold - far beneath the CO2 critical point and often beneath the triple point. CO2 could be gathered as liquid with relatively little compressor work. Or it could be allowed to accumulate as ice on a cold plate. What is the energy input creating motion in the nanoparticles? For particles this small, even brownian motion would generate triboelectric current through friction. It would be amazing if we could develop a process that could convert low grade heat into chemical energy. Such energy could be derived from the sun or waste heat from a nuclear reactor. There is even the potential for geothermal heat to be used in select locations.
TH, that is marvelous! It captures the concept perfectly.
The idea of a layered city does somewhat undermine the original design intent of providing residents with an open, expansive environment. But the cost of the dome may necessitate compromise.
From your link, the flow of liquid gallium over silver nanorods, creates triboelectric current. This breaks the C=O bonds in the CO2. So this process converts a mixture of mechanical and thermal energy into chemical energy. The energy consumption of 230kWh/tonne of CO2, is 810kWh per tonne of carbon. At an electricity cost of $0.1/kWh, that works out at $81/tonne carbon. That is assuming that the 230kWh is electrical energy. So this does look promissing.
This video by Dami Lee discusses the fortress tower cities in the fictional Lord of the Rings series.
https://youtu.be/K0sRNqfiwfw
Whilst these cities are fantasy, her video did get me thinking about vertical stacking of infrastructure in real cities that we might one day build on Mars. Our proposed catenary dome will be 200m in diameter. Although we have yet to determine its exact shape, it will likely be similar in height. It will make sense to use the enclosed volume as efficiently as possible, given the high cost of building the dome.
The lower gravity of Mars offers opportunities in this. It is possible to stack cities as a series of layers, as shown in the image below.
Each layer would be built on a slab of concrete or glued rock about 1m thick and would be supported on stone pillars, transfering load to the layer beneath it. About 10m above the slab would be the base slab for the next city layer. On the underside of the upper slab, we would put a transluscent blue tinted glass ceiling. Under the glass, a blend of coloured LEDs would simulate an Earth sky colour and solar spectrum. The 10m between the two rock slabs is sufficient for a dense pedestrian town consisting of 2-3 storey buildings, with enough space under the ceiling for roof gardens. The drawing shows some 17 layers, each of which would house a town with its own artificial sky.
The drawing shows each layer terminating some distance from the edge of the brick dome. There are options to consider here. We could allow a substantial gap and turn the edges of each town into a sort of hanging garden. Or we could extend the layers all the way to the edge of the dome. This would be the most resource efficient solution, because it fully utilises the internal volume of the dome.
How many people could we ultimately house in this way? I am going to estimate the volume of our catenary dome as 0.5 x base area x height. For a 200m high, 200m wide dome, this would give an internal volume of 3.14 million cubic metres. Dividing by a 10m gap between city layers, gives an internal buildable surface area of 314,000m2. If we take the population density within city layers to be comparable to the pedestrian medina of Fez, total population of the dome could be as high as 17,500. By making optimum use of internal volume, a 200m dome could therefore house a small city, built up in vertical layers.
There are complications with packing so much infrastructure into a single volume. One complication is fire. Our city must have excellent fire extinguishment and containment capabilities. Another problem with stacking layers of urban infrastructure is waste heat. Without some means of venting heat to the Martian environment, our city would cook in its own radiated heat.
Here is a similar paper, this time using cerium as the active catalytic surface instead of copper. Both use liquid metal as conductive carrier for the catalytic surface and dissolved CO2.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-08824-8
Correct me if I'm wrong, but they are talking about electrochemical decomposition of CO2 into carbonaceous products. This is therefore an electrolysis process that needs electric current to work. The catalyst is essential for reducing the temperature at which this happens. But the electrical energy is still needed to reduce the carbon.
It would be neat if we found an efficient and rapid process for converting low-grade heat into stored chemical energy. But the second law of thermodynamics appears to be against it. Entropy always increases.
This blog is an excellent resource for anyone wishing to better understand masonry construction.
http://masonrydesign.blogspot.com/
How the Inuit survive and thrive at -64°C, without modern technology.
https://youtu.be/gjoNsZlRkSk
Quite inspiring. As humanity heads out into the solar system and later into interstellar space, we will have to learn how to embrace the cold. The inuit provide lesson that we can learn from.
The ideal site would be:
(1) Not too far from the equator, avoiding extreme cold in winter and at night.
(2) Close to a source of geothermal energy.
(3) Nearby access to liquid brine or at least easily accessible water ice.
(4) Would allow easy excursions to other parts of the planet, i.e avoid deep ravines and other natural barriers.
(5) Would have low altitude, maximising atmospheric shielding and atmospheric braking potential.
(6) Lower susceptability to impact by dust storms.
Whilst we could in theory build a base anywhere, I suspect there are few locations that meet all of these criteria and there may indeed be none.
Criteria 1 is important, as a base too far from the equator would experience extreme cold and darkness for half of the year. If we are planning on using surface domes or polytunnels for agriculture, that is undesirable.
Criteria 2 is a nice bonus. It allows heating of surface structures, provides a source of low grade heat for multiple activities and adds an option for power production.
Criteria 3 is essential. Don't bother considering sites that don't have access to water. Liquid water, even if salty and cold, would be far more useful than ice. But abundant accessible ice is a minimal requirement.
Criteria 4 is important both for scientific exploration and for the city to develop as a hub for resource development. We are going to need minerals of every element on the periodic table. A lot easier if we aren't stuck at the bottom of a ravine.
Criteria 5 makes shipping resources from Earth easier and also makes surface activities less risky.
Criteria 6 is essential. A base site that is regularly engulfed in dust is a bad place to do anything. Solar panels stop working, crops stop growing, dust gets blown into moving parts and people will get lost and die.
Excellent post by GW Johnson. One addition that I would make is that hoop stress does not necessitate tensile elements in the outer walls. Provided there is enough overburden over your external walls, the hoop stress can be resisted by entirely compressive structures. This is how gravity dams work on Earth. The static friction between the particles in the dam locks them together. It is quite safe provided that the vector of the centreline resultant force (the resultant vector between outward pressure stress and stress in the wall due to gravity) has a steeper gradient than the taper of the wall. If the resultant force bisects the surface of the wall before reaching the ground, then the wall will be subject to shear stress. This might be tolerable within limits for bonded materials like concrete. But is clearly intolerable for loose soil. You could build a pressurised structure entirely from regolith materials, but the walls woukd need to be thick and tapered. That might not fit well with aesthetic requirements for windows.