Printing With Enzymes 43
Roland Piquepaille writes "Researchers at Duke University have developed a new printing technique using catalysts to create microdevices such as labs-on-a-chip. Their inkless printing technique uses enzymes from E. coli bacteria and has an accuracy of less than 2 nanometers. While they're are now using enzymes to stamp nanopatterns without ink, the research team is already working with non-enzymatic catalysts. And it added that 'future versions of the inkless technique could be used to build complex nanoscale devices with unprecedented precision.'"
Least accuracy? (Score:2, Informative)
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I guess it's just because he keeps summerising articles, adding nothing, introducing errors or misunderstandings, all for the purpose of interposing his ads and site-stat boosting in between us and the original article. ohnoitsroland is my favourite tag ever and I consider it a service to us all if someone can get a link to the original article in quickly near the top of the comments.
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The time for forgiveness is now. Do you really want to be the kind of person that holds a grudge across generations? I mean, I guess you could star in your very own Shakespearian tragedy, but those all seem to end with fake-poisoning followed by being stabbed, or stabbing followed
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If that's the case and remains the case, then good - all is forgiven. I would like to be out of date in my opinion and ohnoitsroland to become a friendly jibe. If his nefarious practices have stopped then so will my complaining, don't worry.
old news (Score:2)
E coli (Score:2, Funny)
What implications does this have for the "my dog ate my homework" excuse?
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After my hard drive died.
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Reading the fine print (Score:2)
EULA: By installing the software, you agree by the terms and conditions as laid out in this document.
The consumer opens the package to find no paperwork inside. The damn thing was written on a microdot!
C'mon now... (Score:2, Funny)
No, no, no, you've got it all wrong. (Score:2)
These chemists and engineers (Score:1)
Something smells fishy (Score:5, Insightful)
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Doing a simple wiki search on soft lithography yields a resolution of ~30nm. So perhaps that is the limit of this little experiment?
the actual reference... (Score:5, Informative)
The actual scientific paper appears to be this one:
Phillip W. Snyder, Matthew S. Johannes, Briana N. Vogen, Robert L. Clark, and Eric J. Toone, "Biocatalytic Microcontact Printing [acs.org]" J. Org. Chem., 72 (19), 7459 -7461, 2007 DOI: 10.1021/jo0711541 [doi.org]
They use confocal fluorescence which is, as you note, diffraction limited. However for the high-resolution study of the line-edges, they use Atomic Force Microscopy [wikipedia.org] which is of course much higher resolution. The AFM images they show, however, appear to have rather imperfect line-edges, with resolution of >200 nm. Actually, nowhere in the paper do they claim to have demonstrated 2 nm resolution. Rather, they point out in the introduction that their new technique, in principle, could allow higher-resolution printing that conventional soft lithography, because there is no diffusion of reagents in their technique. The news release focuses on this mention of a theoretical 2 nm resolution, rather than pointing out the actual accomplishment of the paper, which in the words of the authors is: So, in short, it's an important advancement but the authors are not claiming to have achieved the intended ultra-high-resolution yet. And, even without that optimistic resolution, the technique is interesting in its own right because it is a new way to control the nanoscale chemical patterning of surfaces.
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I am not contesting your overall knowledge on that area, but nanometer is nm, not nM (M is a SI prefixe, that stands for a 10^6 factor, m is an abreviation for meter). Your usage may be jargon of some knowledge area (or restricted to some geographical area), but is quite confusing.
Osama Bin Lexmark (Score:3, Insightful)
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You didn't bother trying to read this even one tiny bit before jumping on the first hysteria-inducing buzzword you recognized, did you?
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10 years ago everyone thought all 'bacteria' were dangerous to one degree or another, about 5 years we found out that are 'good' bacteria, that they taste fruity and live in drinks and yoghurt's, so now we stay healthy by drinking 'good' bacteria.
2 Years ago everyone thought E. coli was dangerous under certain circumstances, luckily now we all know that there is 'good' E. coli and 'bad' E. coli, so we can avoid the 'bad' E. coli and not have to worry!.
Of course now tha
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Sheesh, can't it go any faster?!?!? (Score:1)
> to create microdevices such as labs-on-a-chip. Their inkless printing technique uses
> enzymes from E. coli bacteria and has an accuracy of less than 2 nanometers. While they're
> are now using enzymes to stamp nanopatterns without ink, the research team is already
> working with non-enzymatic catalysts. And it added that 'future versions of the inkless
> technique could be used to build complex nanoscale
And the cost is... (Score:4, Funny)
Paper? (Score:1)
Family pictures?? That's what a digital-picture frame is for, duh!
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X's and O's for all my foes.
Dot's all! (Score:2, Informative)
Bert
Memes (Score:1, Offtopic)
A simple summary (Score:2)
Available at Office Depot (Score:1)
in other news... (Score:1)
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Any sufficiently outdated or irrelivant technology is indistnguishable from a pap
Finally! (Score:1)