A Modular 3D-Printed Design to Investigate Prebiotic Chemical Systems in Hot Spring Pools
Arslan Siddique, Dev Chauhan, Alethea Dutton, Kavish Reddy, Soumya Kanti De, Albert C. Fahrenbach, Tracie Barber, Martin Van Kranendonk, Anna Wang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a modular 3D-printed hot spring simulator to study prebiotic chemistry, demonstrating spontaneous vesicle formation and encapsulation under simulated hydrothermal conditions.
Contribution
It presents a novel customizable 3D-printed system that mimics complex hot spring environments for prebiotic chemical investigations.
Findings
Spontaneous formation of lipid vesicles in simulated hot spring pools.
Distinct vesicle morphologies observed under different conditions.
Cargo encapsulation favored in specific vesicle types.
Abstract
The emergence of membranous compartments (protocells) with encapsulated genetic material was a crucial step life's origin and evolution. The hot spring hypothesis for the origin of life suggests that protocells could have formed in hot spring pools and encapsulated organic matter. Previous investigations have focused on mimicking wet-dry (WD) cycles within a single pool, which precludes simulation of many hydrothermal field conditions, such as differential mineralogy, variable temperature and pH and water flow between multiple hot spring pools. Here, we present a modular 3D-printed hydrothermal field simulator that mimics the complex nature of hot spring fields by controlling the variability of a series of linked pools, including WD cycles, temperature, pH, mineralogy, and mixing of different fluids. Results from using the prototype hot spring field design demonstrate the ability to…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
