MRS Meetings and Events

 

EN09.06.05 2022 MRS Fall Meeting

Green Products for the Red Planet—Sustainable Materials for Human Exploration

When and Where

Nov 30, 2022
10:30am - 11:00am

Hynes, Level 3, Room 306

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Lynn Rothschild1,2,Ivan Paulino-Lima3,Simon Vecchioni4,Christopher Maurer5

NASA1,Brown University2,Blue Marble Space Institute Science3,New York University4,Redhouse Studios5

Abstract

Lynn Rothschild1,2,Ivan Paulino-Lima3,Simon Vecchioni4,Christopher Maurer5

NASA1,Brown University2,Blue Marble Space Institute Science3,New York University4,Redhouse Studios5
Synthetic biology – creating new capabilities with life – promises to create a greener future for planet Earth, from fields as diverse as pharmaceuticals to manufacturing, agriculture and nanotechnology. Progress can be stymied by such considerations as economics, politics, legal and philosophical issues surrounding GMOs. Often solutions to these problems already exist, so it is difficult for a new, superior method to displace the old. As we move humans beyond Earth, to long duration stays in the International Space Station, and then onward to the Moon and Mars, the challenges of supporting human life will need radical new solutions. For example, while life on Earth uses an enzymatic machinery which evolved over 3.5 billion years ago, synthetic biology promises to be able to engineer the systems to adapt to current natural or industrial environments. A focus on solutions off planet require a focus on a circular economy. While there are new constraints, such as worrying about the mass of a solution, constraints offer opportunities for game-changing solutions that will then allow revolutions back on our home planet. Example projects include biomining and fungal-based habitats off planet.

Keywords

synthetic biology

Symposium Organizers

Eleftheria Roumeli, University of Washington
Bichlien Nguyen, Microsoft Research
Julie Schoenung, University of California, Irvine
Ashley White, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Symposium Support

Bronze
ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature