Nanotech Motors, Biotransistors, DNA Fractals 96
FleaPlus writes "The American Institute of Physics has a news bulletin describing a couple of interesting nanotech advances. The first is the smallest electric motor in the world, made by Alex Zettl's group at UC Berkeley. The second is a single-protein wet biotransistor. Additionally, Technology Research News reports on algorithmic self-assembly of DNA Sierpinski triangles, by Erik Winfree's group at Caltech."
Coral Cache (Score:3, Informative)
Computer-generated movie [nyud.net] shows an artist's conception of the operation of the relaxation oscillator, and a possible application. Created by Kenny Jensen
TEM video [nyud.net] data showing an operating relaxation oscillator, with explanatory text overlaid.
Re:Coral Cache (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Coral Cache (Score:2)
Brought a smile to my face too.
Soko
OT -- sig (Score:1)
Africus aut Europaeus?
Is that Holy Grail translated to Latin?
Single-protein wet biotransistors (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Maybe the WikiPedia article [wikipedia.org] would help.
--
Fairfax County message board, chat, and public record search [fairfaxunderground.com]
Around here we call it 'life' (Score:1)
Re:Around here we call it 'life' (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
Its like this (Score:2)
tetwalker [sciencedaily.com]
Except its just (nanoscale) DNA molecules, no brains, no eyes, nothing. Its also like a snowflake, in a way.
I also wonder why I bother replying since you won't come back to your post anyway. Mr. A. Coward.Miniature motors (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe I should go RTFA now.
Help (Score:4, Informative)
Eventually... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Eventually... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Eventually... (Score:1)
Re:Eventually... (Score:1)
(more seriously, congrats, guys)
Nanoelectromechanical relaxation oscillator (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Nanoelectromechanical relaxation oscillator (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Nanoelectromechanical relaxation oscillator (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Nanoelectromechanical relaxation oscillator (Score:2, Funny)
what i really really want.... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:what i really really want.... (Score:1)
Erm, how would you actually put them in?
Re:what i really really want.... (Score:1)
How does it work ? (Score:5, Interesting)
I am not sure if I understand the power density claims. Here is a simple calculation. 20 microwatts in cube of 200nm x 200nm x 200nm will be 20 microwatts in 8 x 10^(-15) cm^3 volume. That will be a power density of 2.5 x 10^9 Watts/cm^3.
Sun's fusion power density is only ~ 2.5x10^(-4) Watts/cm^3 with core temperature around 15.7 x 10^6 K. I can understand that we wouldn't be generating the heat at peak density, but if we generate that high power desnity in nanomechanical system for even any reasonable time - wouldn't it just evaporate unless we find a very fast way of removing the power efficiently ?
Re:How does it work ? (Score:2)
Ummmm... I'd guess that the energy is being used as kinetic or mechanical energy - not heat. If I hadn't gotten into a Sunday Afternoon cocktail or two, I'd figure out the efficiency of this machine - I bet it'd be truly impressive.
Soko
Re:How does it work ? (Score:2)
For example, your cpu die is 1cm^2 big, but all the heat is only generated in a few um height.
Similar here: When downscaling, volume goes down with a d^3, surface are only with d^2. So there very small parts have a HUGE surface to volume ratio and are very easily cooled.
Not to mention that there is a direct cooling path to the substrate they are build on.
Re:How does it work ? (Score:3, Informative)
That's because they're really not meaningful. You can't compare it to the Sun (or a Toyota), because 'power density' in a macroscopic sense isn't the same thing as in the microscopic sense.
For example, if you wanted to, you could calculate the 'power density' of a single atom or an electrical current, dividing the current power by the volume of the conducting electrons. That'd certainly give you a very high number - electrons are small - but not a ve
definition of "nano-" (Score:5, Informative)
Re:definition of "nano-" (Score:1, Funny)
Re:definition of "nano-" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:definition of "nano-" (Score:4, Informative)
Zettl is a physicist, and comes at things from a very different perspective. I had the opportunity to see this research presented at an invited talk a few weeks ago at the last APS meeting. It is most definitely nanotechnology on the level of single atoms. Let me explain:
Their "motor", as presented at APS, consists of a resevior of indium atoms at one end of a carbon nanotube, and an indium crystal on the other end. By driving a current through the nanotube in conjuction with heating from the TEM electron beam, they are able to move the indium from the resevior to the crystal and back. The atoms move very quickly, they do not have the time resolution in the TEM to see them. The crystal, on the other hand, grows very slowly, and they are able to see individual atomic layers being deposited on this crystal which is only a few nanometers in diameter. The height of the crystal they can vary from nothing to microns. The whole motor is actually smaller than the smallest linear biomolecular motor (kinesin), hence the "smallest motor" claim.
Thus the fundamental technology is atoms, and is nanoscale. Furthermore, to call this technology "not nanotechnology" is absurd! This is the technique that may enable atomic construction. The ability to move individual atoms around very, very quickly and in an extremely controlled manner is essential to "Drexler's vision", as you call it. Imagine an array of carbon nanotubes, each with a resevior of a different metal at one end, which can be scanned across a surface like an inkjet printer head, depositing atoms on a surface. You would then have "atomic nanotechnology", which is what Feynman's original vision actually was.
Re:definition of "nano-" (Score:1)
Furthermore, to call this technology "not nanotechnology" is absurd!
You're misquoting me. I didn't say it wasn't nanotechnology, I said it wasn't molecular nanotechnology: "The Berkeley group's motor, for instance, is clearly on a scale (hundreds of nm) that is not molecular nan
Re:definition of "nano-" (Score:2)
In nanotechnology, the question of what is a molecule is a hard one. Is a carbon nanotube, which is 1nm in diameter, but perhaps many micometers long, a molecule? It is smaller, in weight, than many proteins, which are undoubtably molecules. Are 2 covalently bonded gold atoms a molecule? 3? 12? 100? Where is the cutoff point? Certainly, we should include things like DNA polymerase and kinesin... things for which motion and interactions on the atomic scale are impo
Breathtaking (Score:1)
Re:Breathtaking (Score:1)
Probably because very very few generations have actually HAD science fiction books...
That said, the pace is certainly picking up and while it's hard to tell from an insider's point of view, the pace almost seems geometric. Which makes sense really - each new generation of technology helps up build the next one even faster than the previous tools.
The quest
Technology makes life easier not harder (Score:3, Interesting)
See, I take the opposite view on this. I feel that technology is actually making life a lot easier for our brains. Perhaps not for all of us, but take an average person. You can effectively run much of your life on autopilot. Driving a car, following mindless rules, technology providing cues and such. Really, many of the things t
Re:Technology makes life easier not harder (Score:1, Interesting)
Certainly even an average science student today has a wider knowledge of things than a well respected scientist a few generations ago. Go back a few more generations and that student would be on par with the greatest scientific minds in the world as far as knowledge goes.
A mere few hundred years ago it was possible for one person to hold the comple
Re:Technology makes life easier not harder (Score:2)
We have too many drunk-driving accidents as refutation.
Once we have autonomous cars, then I agree, it will be auto-pilot (and I can start making the same use of my time as I would if I took the "finishing-the-project-stealing" train).
Re:Technology makes life easier not harder (Score:2)
Re:Breathtaking (Score:2)
Verne is generally considered science fiction.
Shakespear wrote something about a balloon trip to the moon IIRC.
Leonardo had some ideas that were science fiction-esq for his time, though I don't recall that he ever wrote stories about them, just diagrams.
Not long in the scale of things I suppose, but still a few hundred years at any rate.
Mycroft
I Disagree (Score:1)
What we experience is trivial in comparison.
Of course if those cheap nano-assemblers appear than I will take it all back.
Re:I Disagree (Score:2)
Well, I guess from that perspective, we should consider the change that came with the printing press. That event (where knowledge could spread more instantaneously and more widely than ever before) is actually more akin to what we're experiencing now (though the scales are stupifyingly different). My point, I guess, is that changes during the industrial revolution basically introduced speed and reliability to more or less fa
Re:I Disagree (Score:3, Insightful)
Look around you and ask yourself if what you see was available in 1905. I'm sitting in front of a Universal Machine capable of working out any calculable problem. I can talk to anyone and everyone I know without leaving my chair. I could look at the entire human genome and check to see if I share any sections with a chicken. I can list
Re:I Disagree (Score:1)
The former one went from a Dickonson society with short life expectations, lack of hygene, etc, to the 50's, with very many discontinuous radical changes.
The latter one saw what was essentially continuous incremental change.
Re:I Disagree (Score:2)
The DNA trick is particularly disappointing (Score:5, Interesting)
You could probably coax DNA to assemble into face centered cubic crystals with a much lower error rate than that. Hell, you might be able to get little figures of Snoopy and Garfield more reliably than these Sierpinski Triangles. This is like proving you could workably rebuild the Golden Gate bridge from Mayonaise and save the tax-payers a fortune, for sufficiently low values of "workable","fortune", and probably "Mayo".
Re:The DNA trick is particularly disappointing (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The DNA trick is particularly disappointing (Score:2)
Try to imagine something more useful. Like a growing memory chip, or cpu.
Re:The DNA trick is particularly disappointing (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The DNA trick is particularly disappointing (Score:2)
Yes this is useful science - it's a proof in practice of the potential feasability of using DNA for some forms of parallel computation, and I'm sorry if it seemed like I was rejecting that accomplishment. That's a pretty decent thing to have done, even to this stage.
Where I see a problem is there's no natural mapping between using Sierpinski Triangles as a form of binary decision tree, and their other aspect as an example fractal entity (and of course a real world construct can'
This Sonic Transducer... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How long? (Score:1)
Prior Nanoart (Score:3, Interesting)
Thats all fine and dandy... (Score:1)
Very cool (Score:2, Interesting)
Guess I should have staid in microbiology instead of going to Art School. I did these Sierpinski sieve based pieces [marckerr.com] way back then.
Glad to see someone doing something a little more significant with the idea.
from the say-what-now? dept. (Score:1)
brain.... ...hurts...
Supository phone (Score:1)
Re:Supository phone (Score:1)
Re:Supository phone (Score:1)
Nano things (Score:1)