"Molecular
manufacturing has always had great promise, but as
a single challenge, it has seemed intimidating. Breaking
the problem down into stages shows that it can be
achieved step by step," says Chris Phoenix, CRN’s
Director of Research and author of the paper, "Developing
Molecular Manufacturing."
Three
stages for the development of molecular manufacturing,
each with specific capabilities, are identified in
the paper. The first stage is the computer-controlled
fabrication of precise molecular structures. The second
stage uses nanoscale tools to build more tools, enabling
exponential growth of the manufacturing base. The
third stage, which integrates nanoscale products into
large structures, leads directly to desktop "nanofactories"
that could build advanced products.
Distributed
general-purpose manufacturing of high-performance
products has many potential impacts. Production of
weapons, various forms of vice, and intellectual property
violations would be difficult to regulate. Clumsy
regulatory attempts could create an intractable black
market infrastructure.
The easing of logistic constraints could have military
implications, as could sudden advances in robotics
and aerospace. If used widely enough, a shift in industrial
use of raw materials and location of manufacture could
affect resource production and international trade
patterns.
On
the positive side, large-scale use of inexpensive
but highly sophisticated technology could quickly
replace inefficient or missing infrastructure. Advanced
components and materials could make space access cheaper
and easier. Rapid prototyping and production of nanoscale
devices could be a boon to medical research and health
care.
Mike
Treder, Executive Director of CRN, says, "Because
both the risks and the benefits of molecular manufacturing
are so great, and because it can be developed step-by-step
from today’s technologies, it is urgent that we gain
a better understanding of the timetable, the capabilities,
and the actual implications."
Phoenix
adds, "Although the most transformative and dangerous
results rely on the most advanced stage of development,
success in earlier stages could lead to surprisingly
rapid development of the more advanced capabilities.
There are several specific areas of study that can
improve our understanding of the potential of molecular
manufacturing. These studies can and should be initiated
today."
This release is posted online at http://CRNano.org/PR-Developing.htm
The full research paper, "Developing Molecular
Manufacturing," is available at http://CRNano.org/developing.htm
Other
resources:
"What is Nanotechnology?" - http://www.crnano.org/whatis.htm
"What is Molecular Manufacturing?" - http://www.crnano.org/essays05.htm#2,Feb
"Bootstrapping a Nanofactory: From Fabricator
to Finished Products" - http://www.crnano.org/bootstrap.htm
"Thirty Essential Nanotechnology Studies"
- http://www.crnano.org/studies.htm