This is funny-
Th’ Gausslings 15th Epistle to the Bohemians. The career arc.
My working life has been extremely stressful for as long as I can remember. A mirthess steampunk factory of angst and unworkable puzzles against a backdrop of uncollegial passive-aggression. But like most sciency mid-career people, I wear golden handcuffs that hold me back from making a clean break. After years of manning the bilge pumps to keep the place working at maximum capacity, people get tired and inflexible. Minor infractions of protocol project to large images of disrespect and imagined malfeasances that burn into the internal viewing screen of our minds.
I write this blog in part as a means of passing along things I’ve gleaned over time from circumstances and people. Today I have peers who are VP’s of research at some major corporations. Because of the sort of place I chose to align with, my progress will not keep up with these friends. This is the result of the deal I made with the devil years ago. That deal was the result of chosing a location over an organization. The folly of this is now only too apparent and must serve as an example to be passed along.
It is ever so important to be choosy about with whom you sign on and even more important, who you choose to spend your best years with. It is easily possible to commit to corporate beings who demand 110 %, but fail to reciprocate the dedication. Power is in the ability to commit resources. In the business world all manner of things, brilliant or outrageous, are justified by the intonement of the words “business is business”. In the minds of many, this mantra justifies all.
I’m always amazed at how easy it is to don the corporate armor and strut around like a peacock. I did a bit of it myself for a short period after I became a sales manager. But after a month reality threw a bucket of cold water on that fantasy when I realized that power is truly in the hands of people who sign the checks. It always has been. Sales people are a particular breed selected from the herd at large for their goal oriented drive and constant urge to prove themselves.
The chemical business is conservative and socially constipated for the most part. It is nothing like the Silicon Valley paradigm where production is presented as a form of play time. I’m sure it really isn’t, but it is a great recruitment meme.
In business, there are wagon drivers and there are scouts. I’ve come to realize that I am a scout. I love riding into the brush looking for a path. Others are better adapted at coaxing the oxen to pull the wagons.
Business isn’t quite the meritocracy that it is often projected to be. Business demands the adoption of certain kinds of behaviors around the alpha dogs. People land in positions of leadership for all kinds of reasons and sometimes under the most unlikely circumstances. Helpful attributes include singlemindedness, focus on the bare essentials of moneymaking, an engaging personality, and a knack for landing on your feet. Aggressive behavior and a bit of psychopathic ambition are helpful.
The fact of power is the act of power. People early in their careers should strive to understand how power is accumulated and used. Even if you are disinclined to swing the stick around, it helps to understand it.
Get your resumes out
Get your resumes out and polish ’em up. NASA is lookin’ fer Astronauts. And while you’re at it, take some time to polish up that laconic, aw shucks, Stanford PhD’d toothy grin of yours ’cause it’s show time! Tell ’em about how you’d like nothing more than to strap a solid fuel booster to your ass and light that candle.
Trouble is, we don’t have any hardware to fly. No matter. Just tell ’em Летите я к луне!
El Hierro Subsurface Eruption
The undersea volcano, El Hierro, in the Canary Islands has been in an eruptive phase since October 2011. The volcano is thought to vent approximately 70 meters below the surface. Surface events vary from jacuzzi-like roiling of turbid water to vigorous upwelling rising many meters above the ocean surface.
The blog Eruptions over on Wired is keeping close tabs on this event as it unwinds.
It is worth pointing out that a volcanic occurrence like this, in addition to land-form building, can also be viewed as a geochemical event. Subsurface eruption of magma comprises the extrusion of fluid rock as well as the injection of gases and solubles into seawater. In the process, water is flashed to steam which adds momentum to the upward convection of the water column from the eruption zone. This causes mixing to occur, tempering the water temperature and dispersing dissolved materials into the currents.
Mr. Thiel Speaks
When you look for science news at news aggegation sites like Google News or popular publications like, well, any given magazine or newspaper, or (yawn) any given non-fiction television program, what you are likely to find are fluff pieces on topics related to medicine, automobiles, and telecommunications. To people in the news business, scientific progress means new kinds of medicines, better cars, and the latest (n+1)G cell phone or iPad.
It is possible for even successful people to apply pop-culture metrics to economic theory. For instance, the founder of PayPal, Peter Thiel, has written an essay for The National Review in which he questions the motives of scientists as well as their ability to maintain the growth of scientific progress.
The state of true science is the key to knowing whether something is truly rotten in the United States. But any such assessment encounters an immediate and almost insuperable challenge. Who can speak about the true health of the ever-expanding universe of human knowledge, given how complex, esoteric, and specialized the many scientific and technological fields have become? When any given field takes half a lifetime of study to master, who can compare and contrast and properly weight the rate of progress in nanotechnology and cryptography and superstring theory and 610 other disciplines? Indeed, how do we even know whether the so-called scientists are not just lawmakers and politicians in disguise (italics mine), as some conservatives suspect in fields as disparate as climate change, evolutionary biology, and embryonic-stem-cell research, and as I have come to suspect in almost all fields?
The article goes on to paint a picture of failure on the part of the scientific community for not coming up with a Moore’s law style of continuous bounty for the consumer.
Here is where I greatly disagree with Thiel. He cites the stagnation of wages as an indicator of economic progress which, in turn, is an indicator of tepid technological progress.
Let us now try to tackle this very thorny measurement problem from a very different angle. If meaningful scientific and technological progress occurs, then we reasonably would expect greater economic prosperity (though this may be offset by other factors). And also in reverse: If economic gains, as measured by certain key indicators, have been limited or nonexistent, then perhaps so has scientific and technological progress. Therefore, to the extent that economic growth is easier to quantify than scientific or technological progress, economic numbers will contain indirect but important clues to our larger investigation.
… Taken at face value, the economic numbers suggest that the notion of breathtaking and across-the-board progress is far from the mark. If one believes the economic data, then one must reject the optimism of the scientific establishment (italics mine). Peter Thiel, National Review.
This is where Thiel drives into the weeds. He conflates stagnant wages in the post Viet Nam era with a failure of science and technology to produce the kinds of advances he would recognize as worthy.
What is lost on Thiel is the fact that stagnant wages are a kind of benefit to employers and investors as the result of technology. Over this so-called period of stagnation in wages is a complementary increase in productivity. If anything the improvements in technology unseen by Thiel and his ilk have been applied to render human labor obsolete, thereby sustaining profits. China hasn’t gotten all American jobs. Machines have taken over much ot it.
The fact that Thiel scans the horizon from his perch and fails to see this is indicative of a kind of blindness of prosperity. In his world, technology is the internet. Apparently, people like Thiel only register scientific progress as a stream of shiny new consumer electronics, supersonic transport, or brain transplants. The advances in science and technology from the last 20 years are everywhere, not necessarily just in internet technology, cell phones, and Viagra.
Semiconductor technology is now well below the micron scale and heading to the tens of nanometers. Bits of data are heading toward tens to hundreds of electrons per bit. Lithographic fabrication at this scale allows for rules of thumb like Moore’s Law. Growth in component density can multiply parabolically or more as greater acreage of chip surface is consumed in 3 dimensions. Many doublings are possible in this domain.
But parabolic growth in aircraft or land vehicle speed is limited by other physics. A dynamic range of only a few factors of ten in vehicle speed are economically feasible. Fossil fuels are fantastically well suited for use in transportation owing to their high energy density, low cost per kiloJoule, and ability to flow through pipes. Fundamentally new forms of energy storage are hard to find and are expensive. All energy usage is consumption. Science can only go so far in facilitating better forms of consumption for the profligate. Doing work against gravity also consumes lots of energy, so the world of George Jetson never became feasible.
Ordinary automobiles that comprise a part of the stagnancy that Thiel bemoans are coated in highly advanced polymer coatings made from specialty monomers, catalysts, and initiators. The polymeric mechanical assemblies are highly engineered as well as is the robotic assembly of the vehicle. The implementation of automation in the manufacture of plain old cars is just a part of the overall issue of low job growth. In this case, technological advancement => stagnant growth in wages and employment.
Octopole and Quadrupole
Busy week learning to use the new ICPMS. Pretty flippin’ amazing instrument. Reaffirms my admiration for Bill and Dave. A lot of nuances and software to learn, but do-able. Agricola and Biringuccio could’ve used one of these. Of course, they’d have needed 208 VAC single phase power …
Interesting approach to polyatomic ion interferences- run the beam through a He chamber to slow down the large cross section ions and use the octopole to steer the beam into the off-axis chamber exit and into the quadrupole mass filter. Clever monkeys.
Fukushima
The IEEE article “24 Hours at Fukushima” is a detailed account of the events that rapidly unfolded during the earthquake induced nuclear disaster at the TEPCO Fukushima nuclear plant on the Pacific coast of Japan. It is well worth a look.
Rare Earth Friday
Here is a video from the Molycorp site on Mountain Pass along the CA-NV border. Granted, it is a PR piece, but it is worth seeing regardless. To date, the Mountain Pass mine is the only significant Rare Earth Elements (REE) operation in the US.
There has been a large amount of REE exploration in North America in the past several years. I think the rush at Mountain Pass relates to more than just capturing market share from the Chinese. A large number of REE deposit discoveries could translate to excess capacity on the market in a few years. Especially if the economy recovers. As the cycle proceeds, only a few players will survive in North America.
More Molycorp PR-
Avalon Rare Metals is a Canadian mining company engaged in rare earth extraction. Another Canadian REE company is Stan’s Energy Corp.
Yttrium dreams.
There is No Slam Dunk
Every day I’m reminded that there is no slam dunk in business. Everything is hard work and perseverance. Even apparently simple things are fraught with complications and layers of nuance. The great appeal of gambling that some find so convincing is that complexity and vexing details have been somehow suspended and a path is clear for the slam dunk. Slam dunks do happen I suppose, but over time the slams outnumber the dunks.
In chemical manufacturing, there are no trivial operations. Every step in the manufacturing sequence requires thought and infrastructure. Even fillling drums with water and shipping it out has complications- quality control, portion control, container quality, inventory control, purchasing, pallets and dunnage, quality control overhead. Then there is the matter of receiving & shipping, accounts payable and receivable, auditing, taxes, sales and marketing, and all of the other overhead that goes with operating an above-the-board business operation. Then there is the matter of managing a staff and all of the HR delights that go along with that.
Now imagine if you were manufacturing hazardous or controlled substances. Suddenly, your staff are partitioned into those who work with hazardous materials and those who do not. Those who do need a steady supply of personal protective equipment (PPE) as well as lots of documented training programs to operate in hazardous environments. They’ll need physical exams, coats, gloves, boots, eye protection, and respirators with annual training. A smart employer will have the piss wagon come by now and then looking for drug use.
Let’s say that you want to replace a process solvent. You want to replace ether with toluene. In order to do this, you’ll have to validate the process in R&D for scale up. The process change will have to go through some kind of stage gate process to validate the benefit of the change and the approval of all customers. Some process changes must be approved by the customer. Woe is he who wants to make such a change in the cGMP or military chemicals world. Developing a perpetual motion machine may be easier.
Process changes will alter the material streams in your facility. This may trigger PSM protocols that will have to play out on its own schedule. Or it may trigger environmental permits or LVE limits under TSCA.
Process changes may also alter the quality or safety margins that you have previously been relying on, but didn’t know it. This often occurs when a company tries to intensify a process. Suddenly the process is generating more watts per kg of reaction mass than before. Or all of a sudden the reaction mass doesn’t filter well or the pot residence time during distillation is deleterious at the higher concentration or with the higher boiling composition. All changes have a down side. These are some of them. There is no slam dunk.
Gold Rush Alaska. Getting the pay out of paydirt.
So I’ll come clean. I am a fan of Gold Rush Alaska on the Discovery Channel. The new season has started with some serious twists. What I like about the show is the technical side. The miners are struggling with serious mechanical problems and difficult issues with unit operations in placer mining. This is what made life precarious for the gold rush miners of the 19th century and is certainly what caused many to return home empty handed.
Getting to the pay streak, conveying the ore from the pit, moving it to the sluicing equipment, and getting the fines to run over the riffles of the sluice properly require a great deal of energy input. The remoteness of the site, the high cost of heavy equipment, and wrestling with faulty equipment all contribute to the difficulty of getting the pay out of paydirt. The mining season is about 100 days in duration. That is 2400 hours. Every hour must be used to maximum effect.
This season there is a bad guy. This guy, Dakota Fred, tips over the apple cart. So, the boys are heading to the Klondike. But first they need a claim to work in a time of record gold prices and intense activity in the mines. I love the vicarious life.
