Part of my job is to keep siloxanes out of a complex, multi-step, multi-sub-contracted manufacturing process. A supplier change that should have been a simple affair has cost us several kilobucks in analyses in the past months. I hate the stuff.
wingmanjd 17 hours ago [-]
This is the first time hearing the term "kilobucks". I love it (and am stealing it for future conversations).
liotier 10 hours ago [-]
In French project management parlance, we use k€ all the time.
msk-lywenn 8 hours ago [-]
I guess the french equivalent of kilobucks would be briques (bricks)
Ectiseethe 7 hours ago [-]
Historically, a "brique" used to be a million of anciens Francs (old Francs), then converted to 10 000 nouveaux Francs (new Francs) in 1960.
Since the switch to euro, I think the most commonly accepted value of one "brique" is (unofficially) 10 000 €, but the uncertainty makes it basically useless.
I can't recall I've heard "brique" used since the switch to € but it might just be my local bubble
stymaar 4 hours ago [-]
If you were born before WWII, yes.
(The only person I know that still used «briques» in these decades were my grand parents born in the 1920th)
hashar 3 hours ago [-]
I still use « briques », typically « 10 briques » instead of « 100 k ». I think there is some poetry in sticking to the old obsolete term.
mapleoin 6 hours ago [-]
How do you pronounce that? Kilo-euro or K-euro?
Ectiseethe 5 hours ago [-]
Whenever I hear it, it is pronounced "keuro" (k-uh-RO). And "meuro" (m-uh-RO) for millions that are Mega-euros (M€).
liotier 2 hours ago [-]
kha-euh-ro - including the "euh" impronounceable by non-French.
goodmythical 15 hours ago [-]
I wish megabucks and gigabucks had the same ring...
HPsquared 7 hours ago [-]
Megabucks is a common word but not often used as a unit
RobotToaster 20 hours ago [-]
> while a further 7,000 kilograms of treated urine were sitting in orbital storage tanks, waiting to be processed.
Is that a record for the biggest piss bottle ever made?
mannykannot 17 hours ago [-]
A two meter cubed volume would be sufficient to hold that much. I would guess that cruise ships store more urine than that, though presumably not separated from everything else humans dump into toilets.
With the qualification 'in orbit', I imagine it is.
lugoues 11 hours ago [-]
I thought they just dumped it overboard but maybe there are some ethical cruises... maybe.
idlewords 10 hours ago [-]
It's fine to dump sewage overboard if you're far enough from shore. Cruise ships treat it to some extent, but ultimately it all becomes fish food.
euroderf 7 hours ago [-]
In the same way that every breath you take contains at least one atom-or-molecule of Caesar's last breath, every sip you take contains at least one atom-or-molecule of every cruise ship waste jettison. (Assuming sufficient worldwide diffusion time.)
s0rce 20 hours ago [-]
Siloxanes contaminate everything. We routinely see them on various surfaces when doing X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.
isoprophlex 19 hours ago [-]
Indeed. "Grease peaks" we called them, they were always there in basically all NMR or MS spectra I took as an organic chemist. Like PFAS or microplastics, you just can't get rid of them.
mrob 17 hours ago [-]
You can see this grease by the effect it has on water contact angle. If you have a smooth glass/metal/ceramic surface, cleaned by a highly effective method (e.g. an ultrasonic cleaner), water poured on it will slide off easily without forming beads ("water-break test"). But if you leave it out in ordinary air for some time, the water will form beads again even if you never touch it. Exact time varies depending on air quality, but probably within a few hours.
s0rce 15 hours ago [-]
That's not always siloxanes, just atmospheric hydrocarbons.
cubefox 15 hours ago [-]
I bet some of these modern environmental contaminants is causing the increasing age cohort cancer rates.
awakeasleep 1 hours ago [-]
Look up the biocompatibility and safety profiles of siloxanes
ericd 7 hours ago [-]
Apparently we also put polydimethylsiloxane in deep frying oil. Wonder what that does to our innards.
s0rce 6 minutes ago [-]
For antifoaming?
golem14 7 hours ago [-]
There is an even more fantastic incident with Ritonavir (Norvir), where the manufacturer lost the ability to make a retroviral drug for an extended time.
Something like that during a covid like moment would suck donkey rocks.
I hope to see these seemingly mundane unknown unknowns raised in space travel centered hard science fiction. I think The Martian and Seveneves almost captured these but not quite.
tedd4u 18 hours ago [-]
Project Hail Mary has a devilish contamination subplot.
RobotToaster 19 hours ago [-]
I'm sceptical of the claim that they couldn't eliminate the majority of them from stuff that's shipped up to the ISS. Even if it meant making special space certified hair conditioner.
idlewords 19 hours ago [-]
There's a nice paper on this, ICES-2018-123 "Dimethylsilanediol (DMSD) Source Assessment and Mitigation on ISS: Estimated Contributions from Personal Hygiene
Products Containing Volatile Methyl Siloxanes (VMS)". The upshot is more than half of the siloxane burden on ISS comes from God knows where (packaging, plastics, machinery, you name it).
> The main sources of VMS were determined to be antiperspirants ... skin lotions ... wipes ... and hair conditioner. Several siloxanes-free options are available for [these products]. These products are now being assessed for crew member use in future increments.
From the blog:
> At present the agency is testing a new filtration system to put in front of the heat exchangers, to try to protect them, and continuing to try to cut down on siloxanes at the source level. There are probably people at NASA now whose entire career has been built on siloxane control.
Why wasn't the result to simply ban siloxane-containing cosmetics and wipes? The cosmetics are up to the individual astronaut, which is a little crazy, but the wipes are provided by NASA, and they're still using siloxane-bearing wipes, which shortens the life of their water systems and costs crazy amounts of money.
bobmcnamara 15 hours ago [-]
You can't just replace stuff in a sealed environment - if the new stuff is better in one way it might be worse than others. Gotta do the qualification work - remember they're drinking piss up there.
MisterTea 18 hours ago [-]
> Why wasn't the result to simply ban siloxane-containing cosmetics and wipes?
I would assume there is an approval process in place and alternatives have to go through this process before they can be sent up. It might take months or years for approval.
jongjong 17 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
swiftcoder 8 hours ago [-]
> There are so many useless chemicals in modern products... Like foamers in shampoos... You don't need that crap, it works fine without it...
But does it work fine in zero-G, and does the "natural" alternative interact with any other process on the space station?
This sort of substitution is trivial here on Earth, and quite complex in a tiny closed ecosystem spinning through the cosmos
10 hours ago [-]
s0rce 19 hours ago [-]
I don't see why not either, just get "organic"/plant or mineral based cosmetics, deodorants and hair products.
ggm 13 hours ago [-]
I feel the microplastics contamination story which turns out to be measuring nitrile gloves used preparing samples is in this space. We can now measure things down to levels that may exceed our ability to exclude them as contaminants, routinely.
mananaysiempre 13 hours ago [-]
I’d say that has been true since we started using spectrometers (of all kinds). Those things are preposterously sensitive and pretty damn routine. Nowadays of course there are also other, more narrowly scoped detection methods as well, such as PCR.
ggm 11 hours ago [-]
PCR/amplification is black magic. I'm also amazed by "no the DNA will be too old" keeps turning out not to be entirely true: People getting out of jail from re-testing evidence 20+ years later, Hominid DNA statements being made from archaic bones..
Animal population studies used to be (in my understanding) largely observational. Now, people can do scat tests and identify individuals.
adolph 19 hours ago [-]
An interesting substory that is simultaneously reminiscent of the Fogbank story and how Hayek's "curious task" is much more broadly applicable:
There is a good cautionary tale here from the Space Shuttle era. That vehicle
had heat resistant tiles that had to be attached to the aluminum belly of the
orbiter. A special cloth had been certified for wiping the aluminum clean
before applying the primer that securely bonded the tiles to the metal. After
years of uneventful use, tile engineers discovered that new replacement tiles
were no longer curing properly.
A careful investigation revealed that the supplier of that special cloth had
changed the lubricant used in the machine that sews its hem. Minute amounts
of the lubricant were being deposited on the stitching, and enough of that
residue was getting on the aluminum skin to prevent the tile adhesive from
curing properly.
s0rce 19 hours ago [-]
In medical device manufacturing you have systems in place that your vendors have to disclose changes to their manufacturing process that hopefully can catch stuff like this before people die. I can see how minute stuff gets easily passed off as not an important change.
duskwuff 18 hours ago [-]
Especially if the real change is a couple levels separated from the problem. For instance, I can imagine a situation where the manufacturer of that "special cloth" didn't even change anything themselves, but their lubricant supplier silently changed the formula of their sewing machine oil. (Or maybe even that one of the suppliers to the lubricant company changed something - it's turtles all the way down.)
s0rce 15 hours ago [-]
Yes, you would also audit the quality system for your suppliers to confirm they are sufficiently controlling for upstream changes. In theory you can have all your ducks in a row.
12 hours ago [-]
pjc50 2 hours ago [-]
The "curious task" full reference from Hayek:
“The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design.”
Intended as a warning against command economies and centralized structures more generally, because the information-processing requirements are much larger than one might expect. But of course there are few things more central-planning than a space programme.
voidUpdate 4 hours ago [-]
I am mildly concerned about the "normalised deviance" of the siloxanes in the water. It's probably an acceptable amount and it's probably fine, but "eh, its only a bit worse than expected, what's the worst that could happen" is what lost 2 space shuttles
Rendered at 14:44:02 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
Since the switch to euro, I think the most commonly accepted value of one "brique" is (unofficially) 10 000 €, but the uncertainty makes it basically useless.
I can't recall I've heard "brique" used since the switch to € but it might just be my local bubble
(The only person I know that still used «briques» in these decades were my grand parents born in the 1920th)
Is that a record for the biggest piss bottle ever made?
With the qualification 'in orbit', I imagine it is.
Something like that during a covid like moment would suck donkey rocks.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4479028/
https://ttu-ir.tdl.org/items/ff1a240e-1fb1-4b04-acb2-42e9c45...
> The main sources of VMS were determined to be antiperspirants ... skin lotions ... wipes ... and hair conditioner. Several siloxanes-free options are available for [these products]. These products are now being assessed for crew member use in future increments.
From the blog:
> At present the agency is testing a new filtration system to put in front of the heat exchangers, to try to protect them, and continuing to try to cut down on siloxanes at the source level. There are probably people at NASA now whose entire career has been built on siloxane control.
Why wasn't the result to simply ban siloxane-containing cosmetics and wipes? The cosmetics are up to the individual astronaut, which is a little crazy, but the wipes are provided by NASA, and they're still using siloxane-bearing wipes, which shortens the life of their water systems and costs crazy amounts of money.
I would assume there is an approval process in place and alternatives have to go through this process before they can be sent up. It might take months or years for approval.
But does it work fine in zero-G, and does the "natural" alternative interact with any other process on the space station?
This sort of substitution is trivial here on Earth, and quite complex in a tiny closed ecosystem spinning through the cosmos
Animal population studies used to be (in my understanding) largely observational. Now, people can do scat tests and identify individuals.
“The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design.”
Intended as a warning against command economies and centralized structures more generally, because the information-processing requirements are much larger than one might expect. But of course there are few things more central-planning than a space programme.