Skip to main content

Chemical Plant

CategoryIntermediate
chemical-plant
Category
Intermediate
Stack size
30

Overview

Chemical Plant is a midgame production building used to process Refined Oil into a variety of advanced materials. It is one of the main chemical facilities in Dyson Sphere Program and is used to produce Plastic, Organic Crystal, Sulfuric Acid, Graphene, and Carbon Nanotube. It can also refine Fire Ice, making it important both for basic petrochemical chains and for later high-tech production.

Compared with a normal Assembler, it behaves more like a large stretched industrial processor that is especially suited to fluid-heavy recipes. Its footprint is 7×4, so it takes up a substantial amount of space, and it can only accept Sorters along its wide, long side. Because of its size and layout constraints, it is often easiest to place in long straight rows, which makes it especially convenient for equatorial factory lines and other large-scale, planar builds. Several of its recipes also have relatively long crafting times, so production planning tends to matter more than with many simpler buildings.

Chemical Plant recipes are central to several important progression paths. Plastic feeds later manufacturing and research chains, Organic Crystal is used in research, Sulfuric Acid is an early fluid output, and Carbon Nanotube is required for purple science and for Dyson Sphere construction. Graphene is also a key output, though many of the most important products have alternative acquisition routes or alternate recipes later in the game.

  • Organic Crystals can also be mined on some planets, which can reduce demand for Chemical Plant output in certain setups.
  • Sulfuric Acid can be extracted directly from the seas of some planets with a Water Pump, providing an alternative to chemical production.
  • Graphene and Carbon Nanotube still require chemical processing, but their alternate recipes can avoid Sulfuric Acid and other basic raw materials by relying on rare ores instead.
  • Because of the building’s large size, it is worth reserving ample space early if you plan to scale chemical production heavily.

In practice, Chemical Plants are often used as a flexible backup for materials that may later be sourced more efficiently elsewhere. Even when alternate methods become available, they remain valuable for localized production, especially when you want to keep a factory self-contained or avoid importing scarce planetary resources.

Produced by

Other entities of this type

Related pages

Last updated: