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Solid Air

Marcatlas

SOC-12
I wrote this for the Cepheus Journal a while ago

Solid Air Generator

TL 15

500 cubic centimeters and larger

1Kg (not including frame), and larger

Cr250 and up

The Solid Air Generator comes from a further development of the technology that produced bonded superdense armor. The generator connects to a continuous frame about 3 cm in diameter.

It can operate in atmospheres containing at least 20% oxygen or nitrogen and a pressure of Very Thin and above. When activated it causes the air between the emitter frame to compress into a solid ionic lattice, 2cm thick. The frame can be any shape but must have no gaps. After about 1 minute the air has become solid yet retains its transparency. It is about as hard as steel and if shaped as a flat plane can bear 1,000 kg per square meter of surface area. If the frame is curved to make an arch shape the weight borne increases. The power required is 1Kw per square meter of surface area. Creating an enclosed hemisphere requires a circular frame the size of the circumference on the ground. The power cost is 1.5Kw for this type of configuration. A “door” may be incorporated by tying more frame into the ground frame and creating the shape desired. One can then “open” and “close” the door using a controller that comes with the unit. Portable enclosures can be instantly created using this. Most often powered by a portable fusion generator. The frame becomes embedded within the solid air and cannot be touched.

Suspended walkways can be made with this device. Often rare paintings in museums will be protected by such a powered frame. Allowing viewing but not the stealing or damaging of the work.

The solid air is impervious to gas, water, etc. Solid air is almost frictionless. If one were to throw paint on it, the paint would immediately run off leaving nothing behind.

Price ranges from Cr250 for a device that can create a surface up to 10 square meters to one costing Cr5,000 that can create a 10 meter diameter hemisphere. The size of the latter generator being ½ meter on a side and massing 10kg. Larger generators are available at a correspondingly higher price and size.
 
sddefault.jpg
 
I wrote this for the Cepheus Journal a while ago

Solid Air Generator

TL 15

500 cubic centimeters and larger

1Kg (not including frame), and larger

Cr250 and up

The Solid Air Generator comes from a further development of the technology that produced bonded superdense armor. The generator connects to a continuous frame about 3 cm in diameter.

It can operate in atmospheres containing at least 20% oxygen or nitrogen and a pressure of Very Thin and above. When activated it causes the air between the emitter frame to compress into a solid ionic lattice, 2cm thick. The frame can be any shape but must have no gaps. After about 1 minute the air has become solid yet retains its transparency. It is about as hard as steel and if shaped as a flat plane can bear 1,000 kg per square meter of surface area. If the frame is curved to make an arch shape the weight borne increases. The power required is 1Kw per square meter of surface area. Creating an enclosed hemisphere requires a circular frame the size of the circumference on the ground. The power cost is 1.5Kw for this type of configuration. A “door” may be incorporated by tying more frame into the ground frame and creating the shape desired. One can then “open” and “close” the door using a controller that comes with the unit. Portable enclosures can be instantly created using this. Most often powered by a portable fusion generator. The frame becomes embedded within the solid air and cannot be touched.

Suspended walkways can be made with this device. Often rare paintings in museums will be protected by such a powered frame. Allowing viewing but not the stealing or damaging of the work.

The solid air is impervious to gas, water, etc. Solid air is almost frictionless. If one were to throw paint on it, the paint would immediately run off leaving nothing behind.

Price ranges from Cr250 for a device that can create a surface up to 10 square meters to one costing Cr5,000 that can create a 10 meter diameter hemisphere. The size of the latter generator being ½ meter on a side and massing 10kg. Larger generators are available at a correspondingly higher price and size.
You'd better stipulate that when the device is powered off, the solid matrix of gas molecules slowly sublimates. Otherwise, you have a very novel, possibly reusable, explosive device, that leaves no chemical traces.

And maybe, if it's not too fast and not too slow, it's a way to depressurize and re-pressurize airlocks with little wasted gas or need for pumps.
 
By the way, that '1,000 kg per square metre' load capacity? That's about 1.42 psi, or 0.1 atmospheres pressure. While it might be as 'hard as steel' it's going to be very susceptible to pressure just blowing it out of the frame and concentrated impacts like punching it will go right through. I recommend bumping that up by at least a factor of ten, and then pointing out that the support structure for the generating frames needs to also be able to handle the load.
 
You'd better stipulate that when the device is powered off, the solid matrix of gas molecules slowly sublimates. Otherwise, you have a very novel, possibly reusable, explosive device, that leaves no chemical traces.

And maybe, if it's not too fast and not too slow, it's a way to depressurize and re-pressurize airlocks with little wasted gas or need for pumps.
No, if it had that flaw it would be in the description and it wouldn't be a usable product in use as stated in the description.
 
No, if it had that flaw it would be in the description and it wouldn't be a usable product in use as stated in the description.
That's fair. But *you* see a flaw, but *someone* else out there thinks, "hmmn", and will try to adapt it for survival, comfort, warfare, sex, or cat management. That is how technology advances. That's 'The Humaniti Way'(tm).
 
By "flaw", do you mean it possibly exploding when the power is turned off?
Because most players I know would file that under "feature".
 
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