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Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Solar-Powered Nanomotors

New molecular machines could find uses in both computing and cancer treatment.

By Kevin Bullis

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Inspired by natural molecular machines, such as those that assemble proteins or move materials inside cells, scientists have long worked to construct tiny machines of their own to further miniaturize, for example, computers and medical devices. Already, they have built basic parts for such machines, such as devices that walk along a strand of DNA powered by "batteries" that store chemical energy.

Eventually, however, these devices will run out of power and stop working. Now a team from UCLA and the University of Bologna in Italy have made a molecular device powered by an external, practically unlimited power source: sunlight. Further development of the device, which is described online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could lead to applications in computing and cancer treatment.

The new machine "is a step forward from the past, where we had to add components that would be used and produce waste products," says J. Fraser Stoddart, professor of chemistry at UCLA and one of the lead researchers on the project. "That's not happening in this case. We simply can switch on the light, get the movement, and when the light is off, the movement comes back in the other direction. What thrills us most is that it is autonomous and it doesn't involve producing waste."

[Click here to view an image of the machine.]  

The device consists of a ring that shuttles back and forth between two stations on a barbell-shaped molecule, making the complete trip as many as a thousand times in a second. As long as no light hits the device, the ring is held in place by electrostatic forces at the first station. When exposed to light, one end of the molecule releases an electron, which travels to the first station and cancels the force holding the ring in place. This frees the ring to move to the second station. When the device is removed from the light, the first station regains its attraction and the ring slips back.

Stoddart says the new device could lead to low-power computer processor or memory elements that are optically controlled.

Another application could be delivering drugs to the site of cancerous tumors. The devices might be used as mechanical stoppers to plug holes in nano-scale spheres. Once the spheres travel through the body and attach to cancer cells, light shined on the site of a tumor would trigger the ring to move, unplugging the hole and releasing drugs stored inside. This highly targeted drug delivery could reduce side effects and make drugs more effective.

Before any such system could work, though, it would need to be shown that the nanodevice itself won't cause problems in the body.

In its current state, such a molecular machine is still limited. "So far there's no way of connecting it to the outside world," says Dean Astumian, physics professor at the University of Maine. It simply floats around in a solution of organic solvents. "To be applied, at some level you would have to be able to harness the motion to do some nanoscale physical task," he says. "At present, no one has been able to actually hook this up."

Still, Astumian says the recently published work shows promise over earlier attempts at such machines. "The big advantage here is you don't need very much experimental manipulation to keep it running," he says. "As long as you keep the light, it should work."

Comments

  • Scary stuff
    Guest (Emerson Swan) on 01/25/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    I like most of the things I learn about nanotech.  But should we be creating these beasties to run on solar power?  I would prefer that nano-devices be dependent on a power source that ONLY we can provide, articifially, and which can be turned of simply.

    Think it through,
    Emerson
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • nano technology
      Guest (mark) on 01/25/2006 at 12:00 AM
      Posts:
      1
      There is no contolling these nano nutcase scientists, with big government dollars paying for this technology, The ultimate goals of nano tech is weapons, population control, and other bad things.
      Rate this comment: 12345
    • Design philosophy consensus needed
      Guest (Dave Huntsman) on 01/26/2006 at 12:00 AM
      Posts:
      1
      I, too, think it is in everyone's interest to use the 'dead-man switch' option: i.e, you have to do something...however small.......... to keep things moving; otherwise, they knock it off. If this philosophy had been applied in the beginning of the nuclear age we may not have had the accidents--and the subsequent negative public reaction/backlash-- that has held the industry back, effectively for decades. The same could happen in this technology space.
      Such a baked-in philosophy from the beginning would also make it one more 'inhibit' difficult for deliberate malfeasance to occur.
      It would also add an additional liability shield to manufacturers and proponents; so much so that, anyone who doesn't incorporate such an 'obvious' safety protocol could be deemed by an American liability court to have 'reckless disreguard' for the safety of others.

      Dave
      Rate this comment: 12345
      • paranoid
        Guest (Hodges) on 01/27/2006 at 12:00 AM
        Posts:
        1
        don't be so paranoid, these are not self-replicating machines, just small devices. A 2 by 4 with some nails in it poses a much larger threat than any of these devices.
        Rate this comment: 12345
  • solar and wind  polar
    Guest (Danny Thivierge) on 01/31/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    We should stick we nucler power. why shoud we waste millions of dollars on the wind mill just to have them destroyed be terriost or natuarl dissasters
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • sci vs technocrats
    Guest (dr. kamlesh pathak) on 02/06/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    which community has the upper hand Scientists or the technologists
    Rate this comment: 12345
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