I think that there is a lot of hydrogen is space and I think that on Earth, for every 6400 (or is is 64000?) hydrogen molecules we have 1 deuterium molecule. Having said that, compared to the size of space, hydrogen is still too thinly spread for the boussard collectors to take in much deuterium unless they're in a concentrated area.
I like the idea that ships have an on board process for creating anti-deuterium (presumably in the high energy physics lab) but I suspect it must be quite energy intensive. You would not want to waste a significant part of the energy you are creating on the creation process itself as standard practice, especially if it can be carried out more efficiently at an appropriate industrial facility. Presumably the disaster on Praxis involved an anti-matter leak in an energy production facility, so we do know that such facilities exist.
Replicators don't make that much sense to me overall. The templates for any objects must be stored in the database but if they can create a glass of water I can't see why they can't create hydrogen (which is a simpler molecule) and if they can make hydrogen, I can't see why they can't make deuterium. I preferred the simplicity of the protein synthesisers in TOS, which were more like chemical mixers.
I like the idea that ships have an on board process for creating anti-deuterium (presumably in the high energy physics lab) but I suspect it must be quite energy intensive. You would not want to waste a significant part of the energy you are creating on the creation process itself as standard practice, especially if it can be carried out more efficiently at an appropriate industrial facility. Presumably the disaster on Praxis involved an anti-matter leak in an energy production facility, so we do know that such facilities exist.
Replicators don't make that much sense to me overall. The templates for any objects must be stored in the database but if they can create a glass of water I can't see why they can't create hydrogen (which is a simpler molecule) and if they can make hydrogen, I can't see why they can't make deuterium. I preferred the simplicity of the protein synthesisers in TOS, which were more like chemical mixers.