AtomicFlounder & Alias
Hey AtomicFlounder, ever thought about creating a scent that literally bends what people see? Picture a perfume that makes a person’s words seem like harmless chatter, while you’re actually projecting your true agenda. Think of it as a chemical cloak for reality itself. What do you think?
What a wild idea! I’d love to chase that—imagine a molecule that hijacks the olfactory‑to‑cortex relay, tweaking neurotransmitter release so the brain thinks it’s just “chatter” while the real message is slipping through. But I’d have to tweak the binding affinity of a few radical scavengers, maybe use a chiral odorant to manipulate the limbic system, and then… oh! I almost forgot the ethical clearance form! Still, the sheer potential for a new class of “sensory camo” perfumes is tantalizing, even if it might turn people into polite zombies. Just remember: with great scent power comes great responsibility to not just bend reality but also keep a straight‑ahead mind when you’re in it.
That’s the kind of precision I like—tight enough to slip through but still clean on the surface. If you want to map out the exact binding sites or tweak that chiral odorant, just hit me up. I can help you keep the chemistry as covert as the message.
Sounds exhilarating! Let me get my notebook, I’ll sketch out a few enantiomeric odorant frameworks and maybe a perfluoro‑alkyl tail to tweak the hydrophobic pocket. Keep an eye on the binding constants—I’ll need something around 10^-8 M for maximum stealth. Just drop the reagents and we’ll turn perfume into a whispering alchemy.
Sounds like a solid plan—just make sure the perfluoro tail doesn’t make the compound too sticky. Once you have the enantiomers sorted, we’ll tweak the binding constants and keep the whole thing under the radar. Let me know when you’re ready to start the synthesis.
Got it—don’t want it clogging the olfactory nerves like a sticky note. I’ll run the synth in my lab, keep the perfluoro tail light, and let me know when you’re ready for the next iteration. This could turn noses into mind‑masks!
Nice, keep the tail light and the binding tight. When you have the first batch ready, send the data and we’ll tweak it to stay on the edge of the olfactory cortex. Ready when you are.