Will You Ride This Nano-Elevator? 24
Roland Piquepaille writes "Chemists from Italy and at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) have built the world's smallest elevator. It is a molecular elevator, about 2.5 nanometers high and 3.5 nanometers wide. The molecular platform sits on three legs which can move up and down by one nanometer. The New Scientist and the New York Times (free registration needed) are both reporting about this nano-elevator. The researchers think this system might be used as a drug delivery system. Even if they're right, it will not happen before at least ten years. This overview contains some excerpts from the two articles mentioned above. It also includes a schematical representation of the chemical equilibrium between the two co-conformations of the molecular elevator."
Deliver drugs? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Deliver drugs? (Score:3, Funny)
This would be very difficult to detect crossing the border with drugs.
Unfortunately, It would take about a million years for it do deliver enough to roll a joint.
Re:Deliver drugs? (Score:2)
Re:Deliver drugs? (Score:4, Interesting)
The movement of a desired molecule a single nanometer may be all that is required to break that single molecule free of the bonding forces keeping it within a delivery package, thus allowing it to flow at an extremely precisely-controlled rate into the bloodstream or a specific cell. Nanomachines that can move individual molecules short distances will also be able to operate at very high frequencies - the result being the tight control of a desired chemical reaction.
Re:Deliver drugs? (Score:1)
Re:Deliver drugs? (Score:4, Funny)
Walk, Don't Run (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Walk, Don't Run (Score:2)
With the kind of dimensions we are talking about here, you will have to get a "bit" more precise than "little" to be taken seriously.
Elevator? (Score:1, Interesting)
I'm trying really hard to have a "first post" here. The first on-topic and non-joke post. I'm not having much luck, so I'll AC it.
Re:Elevator? (Score:2)
That might be what "elevator" means to you, but it doesn't mean that to the guys who designed the giant elevators used to move planes between decks on aircraft carriers. It seems likely there are many other examples.
Re:Nanomother to nanoboy: (Score:2)
nanotech? (Score:1)
What I wanna know is... (Score:1)
Hey - (Score:3, Funny)
Sure! Where is it?
(Nano-*crunch*)
Oh, sorry about that. Jeez, warn me before you leave another nanoelevator just lying around like that, ok? Maybe you want to keep it in a box or something.
Elevator? (Score:3, Interesting)
Stoddart et al have made a system which can move stepwise in solution by adding or releasing protons (acid). Since this whole experiment is done is solution nothing is going in any particular direction, everything is randomly organized in solution.
So until this system is fixed on a surface and can actually preform some work, e.g. moving a weight from one station to another, I think the term elevator is premature.
And if you want to be able use this system for some real work, you should move it out of solution and into the solid phase. This is one of the biggest challenges of all these kin of Rotaxane based systems
An elevator to deliver drugs? (Score:2)