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Post by primarysecondary on Oct 3, 2017 10:09:47 GMT
Vertical spaces aren't a problem, usually if you're getting an error its because you have tabs or spaces on the empty lines, so the game reads them and wants data but just comes up with two nulls or something like that, just click on each of the blank spaces in your text editor and see if the cursor appears ahead of the start of the line, repeat. I've fixed the spacing in the codes though, for some reason it pasted them in that way, I don't remember it showing me in the preview.
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Post by Rocket Witch on Oct 3, 2017 18:09:58 GMT
Time for some more nutty theoretical materials that make you scour the internet for 4 hours in order to get enough information to implement them [...] P.S: I've just been ghosting for a while, dunno if I should post this here or just in general discussion, but meh. Carbyne has a much higher ultimate tensile strength than yield strength. Did you miss a few zeroes in one or a decimal in the other? Also if neither of these materials is transparent I would suggest the graphite rather than diamond refractive index. There's a material suggestions section @ childrenofadeadearth.boards.net/board/8/material-suggestionsThough a lot of the more futuristic stuff does end up in other sections since strictly speaking that's for realistic suggestions within the scope of the game.
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Post by primarysecondary on Oct 3, 2017 21:51:45 GMT
Carbyne has a much higher ultimate tensile strength than yield strength. Did you miss a few zeroes in one or a decimal in the other? Also if neither of these materials is transparent I would suggest the graphite rather than diamond refractive index. I think what I might have done is taken some original value, maybe diamond's, forgotten that it was wrong, and multiplied by the density "multiplier" that I found (since I couldn't find the actual density), I've just made it so that it has a ratio of Tensile strength:Yield strength equal to diamond's. I just thought diamond refractive index looked better (I like the black), forgot about the transparency, from what I can tell neither of them are transparent, all I can find is a comment on an article by some russian dude who says he's got chains of carbyne and they're transparent, so...
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Post by Rocket Witch on Oct 3, 2017 22:38:24 GMT
I think what I might have done is taken some original value, maybe diamond's, forgotten that it was wrong, and multiplied by the density "multiplier" that I found (since I couldn't find the actual density), I've just made it so that it has a ratio of Tensile strength:Yield strength equal to diamond's. I just thought diamond refractive index looked better (I like the black), forgot about the transparency, from what I can tell neither of them are transparent, all I can find is a comment on an article by some russian dude who says he's got chains of carbyne and they're transparent, so... Transparent materials appear black ingame. The glasses, silica aerogel and sapphire are some other ones.
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gorthaff
New Member
I can't for the life of me come up with anything smart or witty. <-THIS-> is all you get.
Posts: 17
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Post by gorthaff on Oct 4, 2017 13:16:58 GMT
Is there a way of quickly applying a compiled wersion of these, or does one have to painstakingly copypaste all materials one by one?
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Post by RiftandRend on Oct 4, 2017 23:59:38 GMT
Is there a way of quickly applying a compiled wersion of these, or does one have to painstakingly copypaste all materials one by one? Currently the only way is copying them individually. If someone has a mods folder with everything they could post it so simplify things.
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Post by newageofpower on Oct 9, 2017 21:25:19 GMT
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Post by someusername6 on Oct 9, 2017 23:10:01 GMT
Seems to have been tested before, but I can only find papers citing it, rather than the original. If you want to look for it yourself: Lo, R, “Empirical Laws for Hybrid Combustion of Lithium Hydride with Flourine in Small Rocket Engines,” Deutsche Luft- and Raumfahrt, Research Report 67-57, Sept. 1067, NASA Technical Translation F-12,336, 1969.
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Post by Rocket Witch on Oct 26, 2017 16:37:52 GMT
Major update today! There is one thing I've put straight on here without posting elsewhere before, so I will note it here. I played a bit with tracers, since no one made any after the discovery of gadolinium's purpleness. My best find was a compound of samarium and gadolinium producing a deeper blue than pure samarium. Material Samarium Gadolinium Elements Sm Gd ElementCount 1 1 Density_kg__m3 10000 MeltingPoint_K 500
Material Silver Gadolinium Elements Ag Gd ElementCount 1 1 Density_kg__m3 10000 MeltingPoint_K 500
Material Silver Tin Elements Ag Sn ElementCount 1 1 Density_kg__m3 10000 MeltingPoint_K 500 These appear in order as this picture:
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Post by RiftandRend on Oct 28, 2017 6:25:20 GMT
Have a thing. Deuterium for everyone!
ChemicalReaction FOOF Deuterium Reactants Dioxygen Difluoride Deuterium ReactantCounts 1 6 Products Deuterium Fluoride Heavy Water ProductCounts 2 2 ActivationEnergy_kJ__mol 82.8 AutoignitionTemperature_K 773 CharacteristicLength_m .7747 I wonder if Deuterio-Carbons would be possible...
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Post by Rocket Witch on Oct 29, 2017 15:54:33 GMT
I wonder if Deuterio-Carbons would be possible... Sure. They are rarely made and used but deuterated-anything is presumably entirely possible, and likely more stable as deuterium forms slightly stronger bonds ( which is what makes heavy water a bit unhealthy to consume). There is a lack of data for just anything you might want, but benzene and alcohol are used as solvents for MMR spectroscopy. Here's a sample of deuterated benzene. Density, bond dissociation energy and specific heat changed. Gibbs energy line omitted. Missing a new enthalpy of formation, thermal conducitivty and viscocity, though the latter two are relatively minor. Material Deuterated Benzene Elements C D ElementCount 6 6 Density_kg__m3 950 EnthalpyOfFormation_kJ__mol 48.95 BondDissociationEnergy_kJ__mol 6300 BulkModulus_GPa 1.05 MeltingPoint_K 278.68 BoilingPoint_K 353.2 ThermalConductivity_W__m_K .144 SpecificHeat_J__kg_K 1881.79 Viscosity_Pa_s 6.516e-4 RefractiveIndex Benzene Dissociation Products Monatomic Carbon Monatomic Deuterium ProductCounts 6 6
ChemicalReaction LOX Deuterated Benzene Reactants Oxygen Deuterated Benzene ReactantCounts 15 2 Products Carbon Dioxide Heavy Water ProductCounts 12 6 ActivationEnergy_kJ__mol 200 AutoignitionTemperature_K 770.93 CharacteristicLength_m 1.27
ChemicalReaction Fluorine Deuterated Benzene Reactants Fluorine Deuterated Benzene ReactantCounts 9 1 Products Deuterium Fluoride Tetrafluoromethane ProductCounts 6 6 ActivationEnergy_kJ__mol 50 AutoignitionTemperature_K 770.93 CharacteristicLength_m 1
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Post by dichebach on Oct 29, 2017 22:56:32 GMT
Its threads like these that reaffirm my faith in the destructive capacity, if not the good will and cheer of our marvelous big-brained bipedal species!
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Post by RiftandRend on Nov 20, 2017 6:44:17 GMT
Didn't we have Borane in this list? I can't find it now.
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Post by Rocket Witch on Nov 20, 2017 17:55:03 GMT
Didn't we have Borane in this list? I can't find it now. Not that one, no. Pure BH 3 cannot exist; being electron-deficient, it dimerises into diborane.
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Post by RiftandRend on Dec 3, 2017 4:23:02 GMT
Do you think the Alkali Metal-Water reactions would be any good for combustion rockets? The reactants are both dense and cheap.
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