Difference between revisions of "Atom placement frequency"

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* [[Mechanosynthesis]]
 
* [[Mechanosynthesis]]
 
* [[Convergent assembly]]
 
* [[Convergent assembly]]
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[[Category:Pages with math]]

Revision as of 21:07, 26 May 2021

This article is a stub. It needs to be expanded.

For nanofactories to be able to put human scale objects together atom by atom in reasonable timespans they need to place atoms at mind boggling rates.

Example

Assuming f0 = 1MHz atom placement frequency per mechanosynthesis core how many cores (Ncore) does one need to reach the desired throughput of Q0 = 1kg/h ?
Ncore = Q0 / (mC * f0) = ~1.4*1015 cores (about an 1.4 Petacore system). (mC … mass of carbon atom.)
A core size of ~(32nm)3 = ~32000(nm3) seems to be a sensible guess for advanced APM systems.
All the cores together then take a volume of size ~45(mm3) = ~ 45microliters.
This can be spread out plenty to remove high levels of waste heat.
The effective atom placement frequency in this system is f0*Ncore = 1.4*1021 atoms per second (1.4ZHz – quite mind boggling) (>> 109 Atoms/second).

Early mechanosynthetic systems will be several orders of magnitude lower in throughput though.

  • They will have low temporal placement frequency
  • they may be only two dimensional
  • but they'll be already massively parallel

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