A
key technological breakthrough led by the University
of Edinburgh suggests that a futuristic world where
people can move objects about “remotely” with laser
pointers could be closer than we think. Chemists
working on the nanoscale (80,000 times smaller than
a hair's breadth) have managed to move a tiny droplet
of liquid across a surface - and even up a slope
- by transporting it along a layer of light-sensitive
molecules.
Scientists at Edinburgh, Groningen and Bologna are
the first to manipulate tiny nanoscale machines (two
millionths of a millimetre high) so that they can
move an object that is visible to the naked eye.
The team has shifted microlitre drops of diiodomethane
not just across a flat surface, but also up a one
millimetre, 12 degree slope against the force of
gravity. It may be the tiniest of movements, but,
in the emerging discipline of nanotechnology, it
represents a giant technological leap forward.
Although
many scientists are working with so-called “molecular
machines” - a process which involves making the parts
of molecules move in a controlled fashion - the Edinburgh-led
team is the first to make these machines interact
with 'real world' objects. Until now, molecular machines
have operated in isolation within the laboratory,
but this latest piece of research brings them into
contact with the everyday world around us.
The research team has developed a Teflon-like surface
that is covered with synthetic molecular 'shuttles',
the components of which move up and down by a millionth
of a millimetre when exposed to light. The movement
of droplets results from the change in surface properties
after most of the shuttle molecules change position.
The phenomenon is so efficient that it generates
enough energy to move the droplet. In terms of scale,
the process is mind-boggling: it is the equivalent
of a conventional mechanical machine using a millimetre
displacement of pistons to lift an object twice the
height of the world's tallest building.
Molecular machines are ubiquitous throughout biology
(they make muscles move, for example), but making
tiny artificial machines is not easy because the
physics that govern how things behave at the molecular
level is very different from conventional physics.
That means the prospect of large objects being moved
around remotely by lasers is still some way off,
but this new study, reported in the current issue
of Nature Materials journal, may prove useful for
some 'lab-on-a-chip' diagnostic techniques, or for
performing chemical reactions on a tiny scale without
test tubes.
Principal
researcher David Leigh, Forbes Professor of Organic
Chemistry at the University of Edinburgh, said: “Nature
uses molecular machines in virtually every biological
process and, when we learn how to build and control
such structures, we will surely find they have
the potential to revolutionise molecular-based
technologies, from health care to 'smart' materials.
Molecular machines could be used to make artificial
muscles, surfaces that change their properties in
response to electricity or light or even - one day
in the future - to move objects about a room using
a laser pointer. These are not the self-replicating
'grey goo' nanorobots of science fiction, but rather
the life enhancing technologies of tomorrow.”
Links :
School of Chemistry
Proffessor
David Leigh
Leigh Research
Group Source
:
The University of Edinburgh 2005.
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