Notice: This page is still under construction, some details may be incorrect!
Chemist
SUPERIORS:
Chief Medical Officer
CLASSIFICATION:
Medical
RISK FACTOR:
Low
CLEARANCE:
Chemistry, Medical
"I have no idea how the clown got Fentanyl, officer".
Job Description
Chemists work as part of medical to supply the doctors with lifesaving medicines, greatly speeding up the treatment of patients. Chemists also assist the rest of the crew with their own requests, providing Botany with fertilizers, Security with gunpowder, and so on.
Chemists are vital to the operation of the Medical department, as damage types like Poison, Radiation, and Genetics cannot be healed through surgery or topicals
The Lab
A typical chemistry lab has 2-3 chemists maximum, each with their own Chemical Dispenser and ChemMaster 4000.
Chemistry Machines
Icon
Machine
Description
Chemical Dispenser
Allows you to produce basic chemicals using power from it's internal battery, with varying costs. Insert a beaker to get started!
ChemMaster 4000
Allows you to move any chemical between a beaker, and the internal storage of the machine. While nothing reacts within the storage, reactions still occur within the beaker!
ChemVend
A vending machine containing empty jugs, and many more pre-filled jugs of basic chemicals from the dispensers, for when you need them in bulk.
Hotplate
Gradually heats chemicals within a beaker placed on it, the fuller the beaker, the longer it takes.
Reagent Grinder
Allows the grinding and juicing of plants, pills, and other materials into an inserted beaker.
Electrolysis Unit
Breaks down more complex chemicals into less complex ones. Insert a beaker and press to start.
Tabletop Centrifuge
Separates chemicals that are otherwise impossible to separate using momentum. only accepts vials.
Condenser
Slowly turns gasses into their liquid chemical form when given input from gas pipes or a connector port.
General Chemistry
Acids & Bases
Name
Recipe
Notes
Description
Benzene
[1]Hydrogen + [1]Carbon
Min temp: 310K
An aromatic, slightly carcinogenic, ring of carbon, forming a base for many organic compounds.
An effective stabilizing chemical used to keep a critical person from dying to asphyxiation while patching up minor damage during crit. Flushes heartbreaker toxin out the blood stream at the cost of more epinephrine, but may add histamine. Helps reduce stun time. Commonly found in the form of emergency medipens.
Inaprovaline
[1]Oxygen + [1]Carbon + [1]Sugar
Inaprovaline is a synaptic stimulant and cardiostimulant, commonly used to treat asphyxiation damage caused during critical states and reduce bleeding. Used in many advanced medicines.
An analgesic which is highly effective at treating brute damage. It's useful for stabilizing people who have been severely beaten, as well as treating less life-threatening injuries.
A blood-clotting medicine used to prevent profuse bleeding. Causes heavier bleeding on overdose. Commonly found in small doses within emergency medipens.
A weak treatment for radiation damage. A precursor to arithrazine and phalanximine. Can cause vomiting.
Potassium Iodide
[1]Potassium + [1]Iodine
Will reduce the damaging effects of radiation by 90%. Prophylactic use only.
Siderlac
[1]Aloe + [1]Stellibinin
A powerful anti-caustic medicine derived from plants.
Ultravasculine
[2]Histamine + [1]Plasma (catalyst)
A complicated anti-toxin solution that quickly flushes out toxin while causing minor stress on the body. Reacts with histamine, duplicating itself while flushing it out. Overdose causes extreme pain.
A cryogenics chemical. Used to treat severe burns and frostbite via regeneration of the affected tissue. Works regardless of the patient being alive or dead.
A difficult to synthesize cryogenic drug used to regenerate rotting tissue and brain matter.
Wide Spectrum
Name
Recipe
Notes
Description
Omnizine
—
No synthesis known
A soothing milky liquid with an iridescent gleam. A well known conspiracy theory says that its origins remain a mystery because revealing the secrets of its production would render most commercial pharmaceuticals obsolete.
A wide-spectrum stimulant, originally derived from cordrazine. Treats minor damage of all basic health types as long as the user is not heavily wounded. Best used as an additive to other chemicals.
An advanced chemical used in the treatment of cancer. Causes moderate radiation poisoning, acid burns, and vomiting on organics. Can potentially remove the death gene on plants.