Molecular assembler (disambiguation)
Note: The concept of advanced molecular assemblers for diamondoid materials is outdated!
The current concept for advanced productive nanosystems of the "in-vacuum gem-gum technology" type are atomically precise small scale factories.
The three main problems with molecular assemblers are that they are:
- inefficient
- hard to reach
- undesirable
But molecular assemblers are:
- not fundamentally impossible
Molecular assemblers are member of the class of mobile naoscale robotic devices ("nanobots").
Molecular assemblers may emerge as products of advanced nanofactories (among other more useful "nanobots").
Contents
The idea
The idea is/was to create a machine with side-lengths of a few hundred nanometers which packages all the functionality to produce useful products and also make copies of itself (directly with diamondoid mechanosynthesis). This way you get an exponential rate of replication and can produce macroscopic goods in reasonable amounts of time.
Reasons for the problems
inefficiency:
It turned out that packaging all the functionality into such a small package is a rather unbalanced and inefficient approach for in-vacuum gem-gum technology. This can be seen in the nanofactory cross section image where it is visible that the bottommost assembly levels (there arranged as stacked coplanar layers) take the largest portion of the stack. In the small package of an assembler the bottommost layers would be highly underrepresented making it rather slow (and inefficient).
difficulty to reach:
See page: "Direct path".
reason for undesirability:
The grey goo horror fable toned waay down to realistic levels.
Still far down the road in the future (state 2017) and heavily limited by the requirements of the reproduction hexagon.
Assembler hype hiding progress to nanofactoies
The assembler concept was a natural and obvious bioanalogy to introduce initially. Continued refinement with exploratory engineering quickly led away from it though but this went almost unnoticed.
The combination of their appearance (legs or other mechanisms to move about) with their very tightly packed capability of self replication in their vacuum "belly" that seem akin to a "whomb" led to the situation that the public started to perceive this technology as swarms of tiny life like nano-bugs that could potentially start uncontrollable and unstoppable self replication.
Why this is a rather miss-informed opinion can be read up here and here.
- Dystopian SiFi fantasy anchored the idea of assemblers in the public perception (at least in USA and UK).
- Nanofactories coming close to the newer detailed concepts remain yet to be seen in fiction.
Partial design aspects of molecular assemblers that remain applicable
Many considerations about assemblers are still relevant:
- methods for movement e.g. for the transport of microcomponents and self repair by microcomponent replacement in the higher assembly levels of nanofactories. The legged block mobility design is also known from the concept of (speculative) utility fog but has other design priorities in a manufacturing context like more rigidity and less "intelligence".
- methods for gas tight sealing and locking parts out
- and many more ...
- the design of robotic mechanosyntesis cores
Old assembler designs
Quite a bit of thought was put into the assembler model [Todo: link KSRM]. Either they where supposed to swim about in a solution or there was some form of movement mechanism in a machine phase scaffold crystal envisioned like:
- sliding cubes [TODO add references]
- legged blocks [TODO add references]
The ribosome and similar artificial biomimetic nano"machines"
These are also often called molecular assembler although they are:
- non self replication
- critically dependent on brownian movement
- and can only assembles floppy linear chain molecules which again need brownian motion to fold into something useful
Block placing assembler linkage
Unlike diamondoid assemblers this idea is not outdated. Atomically precise building blocks from structural DNA nanotechnology that are pre-produced by self assembly could be assembled to passive block manipulator linkages by those same passive block manipulator linkages after a first one was put together manually. Actuation could be from a chips surface (see technology level I) and self replication could work in the form of exponential assembly.
- Crystolecule assembly robotics might become capable of more or less compact self replication with predelivered "vitamin" pasts from the mechanosynthesis cores.
- Wikipedia: Clanking replicator. A term to distinguish macroscale selfreplication from nanoscale selfreplication. But crystolecule level self replication is very similar to macroscale self replication. So the meaning can be dragged back. A clanking nano replicator so to say. (Sidenote: actual clanking "sounds" should be avoided. Sound emission = loss of energy = inefficient operation = need for waste heat removal)