Chemistry - Biological Consequences of Asteroid Mining—Death by Isotope?

Solution 1:

This is an interesting question and you raise a number of points, let's step through them.

A consequence of this is that relative atomic masses of elements mined—those with two or more stable isotopes—will no longer be faithful to our current periodic table.

But this is already happening. $\ce{^235U}$ constitutes 0.72% of uranium found on earth and decays to the stable isotope $\ce{^207Pb}$, which is found in a natural abundance of 22.1%. Before we get to the asteroid the abundance of various isotopes and their weighted average mass is already shifting.

98 Ru , then this would be expected to diffuse much faster than its heavier counterparts

Diffuse much faster? First off, we're talking about diffusion, not chemical reaction. Elements or compounds usually enter the body by ingestion of one sort or another (eating, breathing) rather than diffusion, and these ingestion pathways wouldn't involve isotopic discrimination. That is, if we breath air that contains isotopes in a certain ratio, then that's the ratio that will initially appear in our lungs. Nonetheless if diffusion were found to be an issue, my guess is that isotopic discrimination by diffusion would be a very small effect. For a gas the maximum separation of two isotopes is given by $$\mathrm{\sqrt{\frac{[MW~of~compound ~with ~isotope~1]}{[MW~of~compound ~with ~isotope~2]}}}$$ In the case of separating $\ce{^235UF6/^238UF6}$ this amounts to a fractionation ratio of 1.0043 after 1 pass. Ruthenium is lighter, so the effect would be larger, about 1.02 ($\ce{^102Ru/^98Ru}$) after 1 pass, even less if it is in a molecule.

Chemical reaction within our body of ingested isotopic compounds would also show discrimination due to primary kinetic isotope effects. The maximum primary kinetic isotope effect is proportional to the reduced mass as follows: $$k~ \thicksim ~\sqrt{\frac{m_1 + m_2}{m_1 m_2}}$$ Applying this to $\ce{^102Ru}$ and $\ce{^98Ru}$ yields a primary kinetic isotope effect of 1.020, again, even less if the element is incorporated into a compound.

To me, the effects look small and since shifts in natural abundance have been occurring for a long time here on earth, with no one raising a flag, my guess (and that's all it is, a guess) is that it's not something to worry about. Still, I'd feel better if a NASA toxicologist looked at the question and said "no problem"

Solution 2:

Whatever the isotopes are for asteroidal material (and they are mostly close to those seen down here on Earth), they are contained in the 5 to 100 tons of meteoritic material that falls onto the Earth's atmosphere (and thus filters down to us on the surface) every day. It will be a long time before the cumulative pollution from asteroid (or lunar) mining can match the meteoritic rate.


Solution 3:

Also, if you follow what @ron said, for large isotope effect you generally need lighter elements. So the isotope effect for deuterium and hydrogen can be large. But even in these cases biological effects can be mostly observed only when one use high concentrations of D2O.

I don't think that diffusion control would play any role in the biology of metal ions. If we are talking about transition metals with biological role, nature is generally relies on transport enzymes and similar to carry around them. Isotope effects are most pronounced in chemical reactions with relatively high activation barrier and strong vibrational coupling with the given atom. In practice it means enzymatic reactions with active centers where there is a significant role of the given metal.

Do we even know any enzymes in which's active center Ru plays important role? You can ask this for any elements that we expect to mine, In practice, isotope effects hardly can seen even for iron or cobalt atoms, which are pretty common active centers compared to most other metals. If you study natural iron enzymes, the isotopic ratio of 56/57 iron is not anomalous. So I wouldn't expect much biological effect to anything that heavy or heavier.

If we are going beyond biological function, and talking about metals and toxicity, most of the time the complex formation between e.g. proteins and the given metal ions is the important question to study. I don't think is it much influenced by isotope effects, and I definitely would not expect that a toxic heavy metal became harmless or similar drastic change.

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