Berkeley
- Nanobatteries, nanopumps, nanomotors and a slew of
other nanoscale devices - most with parts that move
a mere fraction of the width of an atom - are among
the promises of a new $11.9 million Center of Integrated
Nanomechanical Systems (COINS) starting up this fall
at the University of California, Berkeley.
The center, one of six new Nanoscale Science and Engineering
Centers funded for five years by the National Science
Foundation (NSF), will harness the skills of theoretical
and experimental physicists, chemists, biologists and
engineers to explore the basic science of nanostructures
and then use this knowledge to both create nanoscale
building blocks and assemble them into working devices.
The goal is to merge nanotubes
and a host of other Tinkertoy-like nanopieces with
organic molecules - DNA, proteins or nanomolecular
motors - to create sensors or nanomachines small enough
to fit on the back of a virus. Each nanoscale building
block ranges from a few to hundreds of nanometers
across (a nanometer is a billionth of a meter, about
one thousandth the width of a human hair).
"We can't help getting
excited about the richness and diversity of the science
involved and the opportunities in coupling this to
potential applications and making little devices,"
said center director Alex Zettl, professor of physics
at UC Berkeley. Zettl is at the forefront of research
on nanotubes, which are extremely strong strands of
pure carbon or boron nitride that can act as electrical
conductors or semiconductors, yet also have interesting
thermal and mechanical properties. To date, he has
created nanobearings from a pair of telescoped nanotubes,
a nanomotor with a nanotube as the shaft, and nanotube-based
nanotransistors, chemical sensors and electron field
emitters for flat panel displays.
"We'll be designing new
and modifying existing building blocks to make them
accessible to assembling technologies to the point
where you could order them like you order lumber at
a lumberyard," Zettl said. "This is quite
ambitious. There will be a lot of scientific and engineering
challenges here."
The advantage of nanoscale
devices is not only small size but also small power
consumption - the tinier the device, the less energy
required to run it. Some of the devices, however,
will generate energy, either chemically or mechanically
or via light. Many of the building blocks and structures
based on them will first be examined theoretically,
with only the most promising candidates pursued experimentally.
The group consists of 28 researchers
from UC Berkeley, UC Merced, Stanford University and
the California Institute of Technology, and includes
not only engineers, physicists, chemists and biologists,
but an economist. While some of the researchers are
synthesizing and characterizing various building blocks,
others will integrate them and map out system properties,
and still others will develop the tools to manipulate
and construct new building blocks and systems. Several
researchers will pursue the theoretical basics and
limits of new devices. And Brad DeLong, a UC Berkeley
professor of economics, will explore the social, ethical,
legal and societal issues surrounding nanotechnology
in light of historical technology revolutions. He
also will encourage conversations between nanoscientists
and scholars in the social sciences and humanities.
"What COINS will do is
bring together faculty and students who can make nanoscale
building blocks, predict and measure their unique
properties, and assemble these building blocks into
devices and systems. This, in turn, will lead to revolutionary
new applications in information technology, energy
and healthcare," said UC Berkeley's Tom Kalil,
a special assistant to Chancellor Robert J. Birgeneau.
Kalil helped meld the diverse group of researchers
into a coherent center that captured the attention
of the NSF.
Researchers in the center will
be able to make advantage of the new research facilities
that are being created by the two California Institutes
for Science and Innovation located at UC Berkeley
- the Center for Information Technology Research in
the Interest of Society (CITRIS) and the California
Institute for Quantitative Biomedical Research (QB3).
Some of the researchers and
their projects include:
Mechanical engineering professor Arun Majumdar has
developed arrays of nanoscale cantilevers that flex
like diving boards when molecules bind to them. Majumdar,
along with Michael Roukes, professor of physics, applied
physics and bioengineering at Caltech, and other collaborators
will try to turn these into biosensors using lasers
to detect the binding of minute quantities of chemicals.
Electrical engineering professor
Ron Fearing is working with Peidong Yang, associate
professor of chemistry, and Thomas Kenny, professor
of mechanical engineering at Stanford, to create artificial
nanohairs that will adhere to surfaces as do the toe
hairs of geckos.
Carlos Bustamante, professor
of physics, and other researchers are trying to convert
the chemical energy in twisted DNA into mechanical
energy that can crank a nanotube motor. Bustamante
is working with physics professors Michael Crommie
and Steve Louie; Kyeongjae Cho, professor of mechanical
engineering at Stanford; and theoretical biologist
George Oster, UC Berkeley professor of molecular and
cell biology.
A team led by Majumdar and
Ramamoorthy Ramesh, professor of materials science
and engineering and of physics, is studying the movement
of fluids on the nanoscale in order to develop a battery.
This research also could lead to a novel type of transistor
based on nanofluidics.
Researchers with the Berkeley
Sensor and Actuator Sensor, which 18 years ago pioneered
microscale devices or MEMS (microelectromechanical
systems), are transitioning to the nanoscale with
attempts to create devices from nanowires, such as
a vibrating resonator. They include Roger Howe and
Jeffrey Bokor, professors of electrical engineering
and computer science, and Roya Maboudian, associate
professor of chemical engineering.
Zettl, Bustamante and Maboudian
will work with chemistry professors Jean Frechet and
Paul Alivisatos, as well as with other collaborators,
to camouflage nanomaterials so as to allow the binding
of tailored molecules, proteins and other biological
molecules. These "functionalized" nanomaterials
could mimic large biological molecules in the body.
A major education and outreach component of the center
involves not only undergraduate education at UC Berkeley
and UC Merced, but also public outreach through the
Lawrence Hall of Science. And decision-makers in Sacramento
will be briefed on nanotechnology and other important
scientific issues through a new program called "Capitol
Science," organized with UC Berkeley's Institute
for Governmental Studies.
A student group, the year-old
Berkeley Nanotechnology Club, has even been brought
into the center to provide an important point of contact
between student entrepreneurs in science, engineering,
business and law to encourage technology transfer
to the marketplace.
The club "encourages the
formation of teams of science and engineering students
with Haas School of Business students to develop business
plans around some of the new technologies that will
emerge from the new center," Kalil said. He noted
that UC Berkeley has already spun off several nanotechnology
companies, including Nanomix Inc., Nanosys Inc., Quantum
Dot Corp. and Kalinex, Inc.
Contact: Robert Sanders
rsanders@berkeley.edu
510-643-6998
University of California - Berkeley
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