Linguofreak
Well-known member
In this post from the "Terrestrial Planet with a Terrestrial Moon" thread, I mooted the idea of an alien biology in which photosynthesis produces N2O, which is then used for respiration as an oxidizer.
So I'd like to ask the chemists and biologists on the board: Is this at all plausible?
First of all, is there a workable set of reactions for such a biology? (My own thoughts so far are at the end of the post).
Secondly, I know that N2O decomposes exothermally and can be used as a monopropellant. Wkipedia says:
The last sentence concerns me greatly: Does this mean that an atmosphere with significant amounts of N2O would be a planet-wide bomb waiting for a lightning bolt?
Thirdly, I know that N2O attacks ozone. Is there any plausible UV blocker for an atmosphere with large quantities of N2O?
Fourthly, are there any other possible deal-breakers?
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Going back to the question of the reactions such a biology would be based on, I assume that photosynthesis would look something like:
CO2 + Nitrogen source + H2O -> N2O + Food
And respiration would look like:
N2O + Food -> CO2 + H2O + Nitrogen sink
The nitrogen sink in respiration would preferably be something heavy and/or non-gaseous, and the photosynthesis process would preferably be able to use either N2 or the nitrogen sink from the respiration reaction as a nitrogen source, as the point of this whole idea is a biology that can slow down nitrogen escape on worlds with shallow gravity wells, so it's desirable for photosynthesis to consume N2 while respiration produces a heavier nitrogen compound.
Would glucose be a good food for this reaction as on Earth? Can anybody suggest a good nitrogen sink?
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Another possible process might be something like this, assuming some method of capturing N2 from the atmosphere to form N2O were available:
Carbon/Nitrogen compound + H2O <-> N2O + Food
One implementation of which could be:
EDIT: Here I thought I had a reaction of the form HCN + H2O <-> N2O + glucose, but I made an arithmetic error.
EDIT2: I did find another reaction, which I think I did the math right on, using ethanol:
N2O + C2H6O <-> 2 HCN + 2 H2O
The atom counts check out (I hope! I was quite embarrassed to find an arithmetic error after making that assertion in the original version of this post), but I'm not enough of a chemist to evaluate other metrics of its favorability as as a photosynthesis/respiration process (such as whether it actually delivers any energy). Can anybody comment on that?
So I'd like to ask the chemists and biologists on the board: Is this at all plausible?
First of all, is there a workable set of reactions for such a biology? (My own thoughts so far are at the end of the post).
Secondly, I know that N2O decomposes exothermally and can be used as a monopropellant. Wkipedia says:
Wikipedia said:Nitrous oxide can also be used in a monopropellant rocket. In the presence of a heated catalyst, N2O will decompose exothermically into nitrogen and oxygen, at a temperature of approximately 1300 °C[citation needed]. Because of the large heat release, the catalytic action rapidly becomes secondary as thermal autodecomposition becomes dominant.
The last sentence concerns me greatly: Does this mean that an atmosphere with significant amounts of N2O would be a planet-wide bomb waiting for a lightning bolt?
Thirdly, I know that N2O attacks ozone. Is there any plausible UV blocker for an atmosphere with large quantities of N2O?
Fourthly, are there any other possible deal-breakers?
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Going back to the question of the reactions such a biology would be based on, I assume that photosynthesis would look something like:
CO2 + Nitrogen source + H2O -> N2O + Food
And respiration would look like:
N2O + Food -> CO2 + H2O + Nitrogen sink
The nitrogen sink in respiration would preferably be something heavy and/or non-gaseous, and the photosynthesis process would preferably be able to use either N2 or the nitrogen sink from the respiration reaction as a nitrogen source, as the point of this whole idea is a biology that can slow down nitrogen escape on worlds with shallow gravity wells, so it's desirable for photosynthesis to consume N2 while respiration produces a heavier nitrogen compound.
Would glucose be a good food for this reaction as on Earth? Can anybody suggest a good nitrogen sink?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another possible process might be something like this, assuming some method of capturing N2 from the atmosphere to form N2O were available:
Carbon/Nitrogen compound + H2O <-> N2O + Food
One implementation of which could be:
EDIT: Here I thought I had a reaction of the form HCN + H2O <-> N2O + glucose, but I made an arithmetic error.
EDIT2: I did find another reaction, which I think I did the math right on, using ethanol:
N2O + C2H6O <-> 2 HCN + 2 H2O
The atom counts check out (I hope! I was quite embarrassed to find an arithmetic error after making that assertion in the original version of this post), but I'm not enough of a chemist to evaluate other metrics of its favorability as as a photosynthesis/respiration process (such as whether it actually delivers any energy). Can anybody comment on that?
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