Gem-gum technology

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The nature of products in this technology level is outlined in the definition of APM on the Main Page.
This page should give more details to the different aspects of advanced APM systems.


Defining traits of technology level III:

  • robotic control (machine phase)
  • handling of very small moieties or single atoms
  • operation under vacuum

Navigation:

Productive nanosystems

Growing specialization of nanosystems with incremental technology improvement leads more to nanofactories than assemblers.

In the beginning of APM research only (molecular) assemblers where considered as a means for reachig the capability to produce macroscopic amounts of a product or block of material.
At T.Level III it turns out that advanced nanofactories are more balanced and efficient than assembler systems than at technology level I where the border between minimal assemblers and rudimentary nanofactories is more blurred. A rudimentary nanofactory might be buildabel with exponential assembly instead of self replication but simplified two dimentional assembler linkages/mechanisms might work too.
To have an umbrella term for both ideas The term productive nanosystems was introduced.

Using the whole volume for the building process of the product rather than a layer in the "classic" nanofactory design could speed up the building process. But this will not be neccesary for practical usage [TODO find and link existing proof]. If you build a solid block though you might end up being slower than with the layer method due to the fractal growth speedup limit

Assembly levels

The assambly process of AP products can be clearly divided in a number of subsequent steps no matter whether the concrete implementetion of a productive nanosytem looks more like a nanofactory or more like an assembler system. Those steps are implementation agnostic. Further details can de found on the assembly levels page.

Assemblers

Artistic depiction of a mobile assembler unit capable of self replication. An outdated idea.

Note: The concept of assemblers is outdated!
The idea is 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 reproduction and can produce macroscopic goods in reasonable amounts of time.

It turned out that packaging all the functionality into such a small package is a rather unbalanced and inefficient approach for T.Level III. This can be seen in the nanofactory cross section image (further down this page) where it is visible that the bottommost assembly levels (here layers) take the largest portion of the stack. In the small package of an assembler the bottommost layers would be underrepresented making it rather slow.

Quite a bit of thought was put into this model. 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 combination of their appearance (legs) 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 missinformed opinion can be read up here.

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 Utility Fog (speculativity warning) but has other design priorities in an manufacturing context like more rigidity and less "intelligence".
  • methods for gas tight sealing
  • and many more ...

Advanced nanofactories

Cross section through a nanofactory showing the lower assembly levels vertically stacked on top of each other. Image from the official "productive nanosystems" video.
Artistic depiction of a nanofactory. Only the last assembly level (convergent assembly) is visible to the naked eye.

An artistic depiction of a nanofactory. Note that only assemly level IV (convergent assembly) is visible in this picture.
The official productive nanosystem video [1] shows all the other assembly levels except IV. It further only shows mills and no general purpose robotics for mechanosynthesis.

Note that in a stratified design that uses convergent assembly that is strictly ordered after assembly levels a block made from eight blocks must come from only four ports of the stage below. Consequently the production frequency must double with every stage one goes down, which is no problem since objects of half size can move with twice the frequency (a scaling law). (In computer terms you extract an octree out of a a quadtree). The lowest levels (assebly levels <= II) are significantly slower then simple mergement steps. Depending on whether general purpose mechanosynthetic fabricators or mill style fabricators are used more or less layers and channels for threading parts by are needed.

There is an interesting article about Nanofactory design written by Chris Phoenix in 2003 "Design of a Primitive Nanofactory". What follows is a short discussion of that document. More information can be founds on the "discussion of proposed nanofactory designs" page.

Component router systems

For the transport of unfinished product parts of different sizes from lower to higher assembly levels nanofactories use routing structures either with separate or merged multiplexing and de-multiplexing steps.

There are two in some respects similar yet in other respects very different steps where this occurs.

Since direct control of those systems would clog the IO bottleneck hirachical heterogenous nanomechanical computing system must be integrated in parallel. Temporary storage facilities for microcomponents are optional and may be more useful as seperate macroscopic entity.

Design levels

APM systems can depending on the size of the chunk of them that is under considereration be designed at three different levels:

  • tooltip chemistry level
  • atomistic mechanic level
  • lower bulk limit
  • system level

Further details can de found on the design levels page.

Diamondoid Molecular Elements (DMEs)

At the core an advanced productive APM systems consist out of DMEs.
DMEs can be designed either directly at the atomistic level or in lower bulk limit form.

There are two types of DMEs:

  • Diamondoid Molecular machine elements DMMEs
  • Diamondoid Molecular structural elements DMSEs

Furthere details can be found diamondoid molecular elements page.

Certain standard sets like housing components or a minimal set of compatible DMMEs are needed.

Potential structural and machine elements that seem suitable to port them to DME designs can be found here:

Depending on the design different degrees of modifications need to be done.
All degrees of freedome need to be controlled, wall thicknesses need to be increased, atomic roughness must be considered, ...

Logistics

A lot of media need to be shoved around in a nanofactory.
Included are: data; energy; raw material; heat; waste; partly finished products; vacua (in some sense); noble gasses
The use of electricity is avoided at the lowest size levels since tunneling and conduction around bents are nontrivial. See non mechanical technology path.

The routing of the structures bearing those different media i.e. the schematics to physical layout mapping is part of the system level design. Some structures bearing the transmitted media can be found on the "diamondoid molecular elements" page.

Vacuum

Mechanosynthesis of diamondoid materials in t.level III needs to be done in a "perfect" vacuum (or noble gas). Actually this is the defining trait seperating it from t.level II. Any free gas molecules would quickly react with the tooltips rendering them dysfunctional. From current perspective creation of "perfect" vacua seems illusionary. Any operator of an UHV system knows that it is impossible to get rid of all the gas molecules that are unavoidably adsorbed on the vacuuum vessels walls. The current perspective is based on the current technology though. The vacuum vessels for APM systems of t.level III

  • are cavities sized in the nanometer range - this increases the probability of having zero gas molecules captured inside
  • have atomically precise maximally flat walls - not allowing for gas adsorption and allowing for maximally tight seals without out-gassing lubricants
  • can utilize atomically tight positive displacement pumps for vacuum generation - no backflow

and are thus capable of creating sufficient vacua. (About sealings and pumps: Nanosystems 11.4.2 & 11.4.3)

Locking out

At some place in the assembly levels (above Level II) products or fractions of them need to be locked out out of the vacuum area while keeping the interior perfectly gas free. This can be done with two pistons like depicted below. This method doubles as a pump for stray gas molecules. Import of parts (locking them in) is not possible here. Openings are wide enough to allow free molecular flow.

To get the parts through the airlock at some point one has to let go of the parts. To keep the parts in machine phase one can designed them to have three surfaces normal to each other at their outermost positions (red lines in graphic) so they stick in a corner by Van der Waals forces. Alternately for parts filling almost the whole chamber conical re-centering could be used to get the parts back into machine phase.

A method to lock out passivated parts into non-vacuum-areas that keeps the internal vacuum completely intact. Only export of parts is possible here. To import parts for tuning/repair/recycling an other method has to be used.

If not only dust free-ness but also vacuum is kept till the macroscopic outlet this waste free expulsion mechanism may not work because of wall bending & buckling at the macro scale [To inverstigate]. An other more wasteful proposal was to enclose the whole products in sausage shaped balloons (inflated by e.g. argon) which come one after another through a cylindrical output port and keep a tight seal at all times. This is more likely to work and can be designed without exposure of dangerous atomically sharp edges.

In an convergent assembly design if airlocks are installed at all assembly levels and the factory supports it it could be merged and split by hand. E.g. Take of the top stage and then split up the sub stages. A direct assembly design that supports it could be split at any perceivable ratio.

Locking in

It is more difficult to lock in parts. This reverse direction isn't a necessity for t.level III APM with its mechanosynthesis done in vacuum. A lot recycling can probably be done with passivated microcomponents in a non vacuum environment.

The ability to lock parts back in might be useful for tuning / repair / DME recycling on a sub microcomponent level (see assembly levels).

To get parts as clean as possible before locking them in again several measures can be taken:

  • cleaning the un-disassembled product with very high pressure noble steams
  • tag surface microcomponents as potentially dirt contaminated and scrap the hole shell (wasteful but better than scrapping the whole un-disassambled product)
  • keep internals of porducts isolated (does not work if the product itself is a filter)
  • filtering argon from air and blowing it outward in a pre-chamber forming a dust seal


To lock parts in by shearing off gas molecules is not an option since the parts can be arbitrarily shaped. Still extremely low probabilities of remaining trapped gas molecules can be archived by usage of various pumping methods.

  • using pistons / bellows that have a multiple volume of the handled parts
  • operating pistons multiple times
  • stacking airlocks in stages.
  • additional usage of microscale turbo-molecular pumps (Nanosystems: Section 11.4.3.)
  • exposed unpassivated surfaces
  • slight heating if the nanofactory and product allows this (and when no remnants of temperature sensitive t.level I are included)

Examples for positive displacement pumps:

  • piston pumps - advantage of high throughput area
  • bellow pumps
  • scroll pumps
  • processing cavity pumps

alternate vacuum methods

  • blowing up a vacuum bubble by either an extendable flexible skin or sliding blocks - Nanosystems: Figure 14.2. & Figure 14.3.
  • extruding a cuboid out of a cuboid - this was an idea for assembler self replication - Nanosystems: Figure 14.6. & KSRM ...
  • usage of some noble gas instead of vacuum to blow up non-stiff enclosures