Title: Emerging Technologies
1Emerging Technologies
State university of New York at New
Paltz Electrical and Computer Engineering
Department
Dr. Yaser M. Agami Khalifa
2Outlines
- Nanotech Goes to Work DNA Computing
- Digitally Programmed Cells
- Evolvable Hardware
3Definition
- Molecular nanotechnology Thorough, inexpensive
control of the structure of matter based on
molecule-by-molecule control of products and
byproducts the products and processes of
molecular manufacturing, including molecular
machinery.
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5Programmable Molecules
- The tweezers exploit the complementary nature of
the two strands that make up the famous double
helix that is DNA. - A stretch of single-stranded DNA will stick
firmly to another single strand only if their
sequences of bases match up correctly.
6How it Works
- The tweezers comprise three single strands of
synthetic DNA. Two strands act as the arms one
strand straddles the others and acts as a kind of
backbone and hinge holding the whole V-shaped
structure together.
- The tweezers comprise three single strands of
synthetic DNA. Two strands act as the arms one
strand straddles the others and acts as a kind of
backbone and hinge holding the whole V-shaped
structure together. - The arms extend far enough to leave a number of
unpaired bases dangling free beyond the backbone.
- When a fourth DNA strand is added to the test
tube, it grabs the unpaired bases and zips the
tweezers shut. Again, just a few bases are
allowed to hang unpaired, which permits a fifth
strand to rip away the first fuel unit and open
the tweezers.
7Where is it going
- Dr Yurke said of his team's DNA tweezers "This
may lead to a test-tube based nanofabrication
technology that assembles complex structures,
such as circuits, through the orderly addition of
molecules." - The Bell Laboratories are already working to
attach DNA to electrically conducting molecules
to assemble rudimentary molecular-scale
electronic circuits.
8How will nanotechnology improve our lives?
- One of the first obvious benefits is the
improvement in manufacturing techniques. We are
taking familiar manufacturing systems and
expanding them to develop precision on the atomic
scale.
9- Some of the most dramatic changes are expected in
the realms of medicine. Scientists envision
creating machines that will be able to travel
through the circulatory system, cleaning the
arteries as they go sending out troops to track
down and destroy cancer cells and tumors or
repairing injured tissue at the site of the
wound, even to the point of replacing missing
limbs or damaged organs.
10- Nanotechnology is expected to touch almost every
aspect of our lives, right down to the water we
drink and the air we breathe. Once we have the
ability to capture, position, and change the
configuration of a molecule, we should be able to
create filtration systems that will scrub the
toxins from the air or remove hazardous organisms
from the water we drink. We should be able to
begin the long process of cleaning up our
environment.
11What progress is being made today in
nanotechnology?
- Scientists are working not just on the materials
of the future, but also the tools that will allow
us to use these ingredients to create products.
Experimental work has already resulted in the
production of moleculat tweezers, a carbon
nanotube transistor, and logic gates.
12- Theoretical work is progressing as well. James M.
Tour of Rice University is working on the
construction of molecular computer. Researchers
at Zyvex have proposed an Exponential Assembly
Process that might improve the creation of
assemblers and products, before they are even
simulated in the lab. We have even seen
researchers create an artificial muscle using
nanotubes, which may have medical applications in
the nearer term.
13RecentChemicals Map Nanowire Arrays (Feb. 04)
- One promising possibility for replacing today's
chipmaking technologies when they can no longer
shrink circuit size is arrays of nanowires whose
junctions form tiny, densely packed transistors. - Harvard University and California Institute of
Technology researchers have devised a scheme to
chemically modify selected nanowire junctions to
make them react differently to electrical current
than the junctions around them.
14- The chemical modification makes cross points more
sensitive to switching voltage than unmodified
cross points, making it possible to selectively
address nanowire outputs using far fewer control
wires. - This makes connecting nano components to
ordinary-size circuits possible and is also a
step toward making the integrated memory and
logic needed to make a functional nanocomputer.
15- Prototype memory and processors could be built
within two to five years, and commercial devices
within five to ten years, according to the
researchers. The research appeared in the
November 21, 2003 issue of Science.
16Recent Updates (Friday 2/6/04)
- Researchers from the University of California at
Berkeley and Stanford University have fabricated
a circuit that combines carbon nanotube
transistors and traditional silicon transistors
on one computer chip. Connecting minuscule
nanotube transistors to traditional silicon
transistors enables the atomic-scale electronics
to communicate with existing electronic
equipment.
17Digitally Programmed Cells
18Motivation
- Goal program biological cells
- Characteristics
- small (E.coli 1x2?m , 109/ml)
- self replicating
- energy efficient
- Potential applications
- smart drugs / medicine
- agriculture
- embedded systems
19Approach
logic circuit
high-level program
genome
microbial circuit compiler
- in vivo chemical activity of genomeimplementscom
putation specified by logic circuit
20Key Biological Inverters
- Propose to build inverters in individual cells
- each cell has a (complex) digital circuit built
from inverters - In digital circuit
- signal protein synthesis rate
- computation protein production decay
21Digital Circuits
- With these inverters, any (finite) digital
circuit can be built!
C
A
C
D
D
gene
B
C
B
gene
gene
- proteins are the wires, genes are the gates
- NAND gate wire-OR of two genes
22Components of Inversion
- Use existing in vivo biochemical mechanisms
- stage I cooperative binding
- found in many genetic regulatory networks
- stage II transcription
- stage III translation
- decay of proteins (stage I) mRNA (stage III)
23- The majority of genes are expressed as the
proteins they encode. The process occurs in two
steps - Transcription DNA ? RNA
- Translation RNA ? protein
- Taken together, they make up the "central dogma"
of biology DNA ? RNA ? protein.
24Stage I Cooperative Binding
C
C
- fA input protein synthesis rate
- rA repression activity (concentration
of bound operator) - steady-state relation C is sigmoidal
rA
fA
25Stage II Transcription
T
rA
yZ
transcription
repression
mRNA synthesis
T
- rA repression activity
- yZ mRNA synthesis rate
- steady-state relation T is inverse
yZ
rA
26Stage III Translation
L
fZ
yZ
translation
output protein
mRNA synthesis
mRNA
L
- fZ output signal of gate
- steady-state relation L is mostly linear
fZ
yZ
27Putting it together
signal
L
T
C
rA
fA
fZ
yZ
cooperative binding
transcription
translation
repression
input protein
output protein
mRNA synthesis
input protein
mRNA
- inversion relation I
- ideal transfer curve
- gain (flat,steep,flat)
- adequate noise margins
I
fZ I (fA) L T C (fA)
gain
fZ
0
1
fA
28Inverters Dynamic Behavior
- Dynamic behavior shows switching times
A
active gene
Z
time (x100 sec)
29Connect Ring Oscillator
- Connected gates show oscillation, phase shift
A
B
C
time (x100 sec)
30Memory RS Latch
_ R
A
_ S
B
time (x100 sec)
31Limits to Circuit Complexity
- amount of extracellular DNA that can be inserted
into cells - reduction in cell viability due to extra
metabolic requirements - selective pressures against cells performing
computation
32Challenges
- Engineer component interfaces
- Develop instrumentation and modeling tools
- Create computational organizing principles
- Invent languages to describe phenomena
- Builds models for organizing cooperative behavior
- Create a new discipline crossing existing
boundaries - Educate a new set of engineering/biochemistry
oriented students
33Evolvable Hardware
34The EHW Controlled Prosthetic Artificial Hand
Project
- Conventional EMG(Electromyograph)-contorolled
prosthetic hands take almost one month until
users master the control of hand movements. - The EHW controller, however, succeeded in
reducing such rehabilitation time drastically
(about ten minutes!). - The EHW for the hand adaptively synthesizes a
pattern recognition circuit which is tailored to
each user, because EMG has strong individual
differences. A gate-level EHW LSI is developed
for this EMG hand.
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