Title: Whither Nanotechnology
1Whither Nanotechnology
- Ralph C. Merkle
- Xerox PARC
- www.merkle.com
2Seventh Elba-Foresight Conference on
NanotechnologyApril, 1999Rome,
Italywww.foresight.org/Conferences
3The goal nanotechnology(a.k.a. molecular
manufacturing)
- Fabricate most structures that are specified with
molecular detail and which are consistent with
physical law - Get essentially every atom in the right place
- Inexpensive manufacturing costs (10-50
cents/kilogram)
http//nano.xerox.com/nano
4Where we are today
- We can make only an infinitesimal fraction of
whats possible - We spray atoms around almost randomly
- We pay many millions of dollars per kilogram for
the thin layer on top of a computer chip that
actually computes
5Possible arrangements of atoms
What we can make today (not to scale)
.
6The goal of molecular nanotechnology a healthy
bite.
.
7We must develop fundamentally new capabilities
Molecular Manufacturing Systems
We dont have molecular manufacturing today.
.
What we can make today (not to scale)
8Should we actively pursue the development of
molecular nanotechnology?
- Is it feasible?
- Is it valuable?
- Can we do things today to speed its development?
9The good news
- It is now generally accepted that molecular
nanotechnology is feasible and valuable. - (This took a few decades)
10The principles of physics, as far as I can see,
do not speak against the possibility of
maneuvering things atom by atom. It is not
anattempt to violate any laws it is something,
in principle, that can be done but in practice,
it has not been done because we are toobig.
Richard Feynman, 1959
http//nano.xerox.com/nanotech/feynman.html
11Most interesting structures that are at least
substantial local minima on a potential energy
surface can probably be made one way or another.
Richard Smalley Nobel
Laureate in Chemistry, 1996
12The bad news
- Theres still a great deal of confusion and
disagreement about what to do
13What needs to be done
- Experimental work to advance existing
capabilities - Theoretical work to clarify pathways and
objectives
14Overview of the development of molecular
nanotechnology
Products
Products
Core molecular manufacturing capabilities
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Today
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
Products
15Issues
- Positional control
- Self replication
- Idiosyncratic versus systematic
- Making big things
- How long
16A proposal for a programmable molecular
positional device
17Issues with positional control
- Speed
- Size
- Error rates
- Imperfect environment
- Tip characteristics
18Proposal for a self replicating device an
assembler
http//www.foresight.org/UTF/Unbound_LBW/chapt_6.h
tml
19Von Neumann architecture for a self replicating
system
Universal Computer
Universal Constructor
http//nano.xerox.com/nanotech/vonNeumann.html
20Drexlers architecture for an assembler
Molecular computer
Molecular constructor
Positional device
Tip chemistry
21Complexity of self replicating systems (bits)
C program 808 Von Neumann's universal
constructor 500,000 Internet worm (Robert Morris,
Jr., 1988) 500,000 Mycoplasma capricolum 1,600,0
00 E. Coli 9,278,442 Drexler's
assembler 100,000,000 Human 6,400,000,000
NASA Lunar Manufacturing Facility over
100,000,000,000
http//nano.xerox.com/nanotech/selfRep.html
22A C program that prints out an exact copy of
itself
- main()char q34, n10,a"main() char
q34,n10,acsc printf(a,q,a,q,n)c"printf
(a,q,a,q,n)
For more information, see the Recursion
Theorem http//nano.xerox.com/nanotech/selfRep.ht
ml
23English translation
- Print the following statement twice, the second
time in quotes - Print the following statement twice, the second
time in quotes
24Idiosyncratic vs systematic
- Idiosyncratic view each new thing that we
synthesize requires some new and unique method of
making it which takes much time and effort to
work out. - Systematic view new things are made by using old
tools in different ways to rearrange standard
parts.
25Is nanotechnology only about small things?
- Nanotechnology sounds like its about making
small things. - But its actually about the precision with which
we make things of all sizes, including very big
things.
26How long?
- We dont know
- Trends in computer hardware suggest early in the
next century perhaps in the 2010 to 2020 time
frame - How long it takes depends on what we do. A
focused effort will greatly speed development.
27Its possible to think that nanotechnology
- Wont involve positional control
- Wont involve self replication
- Wont be systematic
- Will only make small things
- Will take 100 years
28Can we abandon these principles without
compromising the goal?
- Positional control
- Self replication
- Systematic methods
- Products of all sizes
- A focused effort to develop the technology within
our lifetimes