Title: Nanotechnology: manufacturing as extended chemistry
1(No Transcript)
2Nanotechnologymanufacturing as extended
chemistry
- Ralph C. Merkle, Ph.D.
- Principal Fellow
3Slides on web
- The overheads (in PowerPoint) are available on
the web at - http//www.zyvex.com/nanotech/talks/ppt/
- ACS Santa Clara 010524.ppt
4Foresight
- Ninth Foresight Conferenceon Molecular
Nanotechnology - November 9-11, 2001
- Santa Clara, CaliforniaIntroductory tutorial
November 8 - www.foresight.org/Conferences/MNT9/
5Foresight
www.nanodot.org
www.foresight.org/SrAssoc/
Gatherings
6Health, wealth and atoms
7Arranging atoms
8Richard Feynman,1959
Theres plenty of room at the bottom
9Eric Drexler, 1992
10President Clinton, 2000
The National Nanotechnology Initiative
- Imagine the possibilities materials with ten
times the strength of steel and only a small
fraction of the weight -- shrinking all the
information housed at the Library of Congress
into a device the size of a sugar cube --
detecting cancerous tumors when they are only a
few cells in size.
11Arrangements of atoms
.
Today
12The goal
.
13What to make
Diamond physical properties
- Property Diamonds value Comments
- Chemical reactivity Extremely low
- Hardness (kg/mm2) 9000 CBN 4500 SiC 4000
- Thermal conductivity (W/cm-K) 20 Ag 4.3 Cu
4.0 - Tensile strength (pascals) 3.5 x 109
(natural) 1011 (theoretical) - Compressive strength (pascals) 1011 (natural) 5 x
1011 (theoretical) - Band gap (ev) 5.5 Si 1.1 GaAs 1.4
- Resistivity (W-cm) 1016 (natural)
- Density (gm/cm3) 3.51
- Thermal Expansion Coeff (K-1) 0.8 x 10-6 SiO2
0.5 x 10-6 - Refractive index 2.41 _at_ 590 nm Glass 1.4 - 1.8
- Coeff. of Friction 0.05 (dry) Teflon 0.05
- Source Crystallume
14Hydrocarbon bearing
15Hydrocarbon universal joint
16Rotary to linear
NASA Ames
17Bucky gears
NASA Ames
18Bearing
19Planetary gear
20Neon pump
21Fine motion controller
22Positional assembly
23Thermal noise
s mean positional error k restoring force kb
Boltzmanns constant T temperature
24Thermal noise
s 0.02 nm (0.2 Ã…) k 10 N/m kb 1.38 x 10-23
J/K T 300 K
25Making diamond today
Illustration courtesy of P1 Diamond Inc.
26A synthetic strategy for the synthesis of
diamondoid structures
Molecular tools
- Positional assembly (6 degrees of freedom)
- Highly reactive compounds (radicals, carbenes,
etc) - Inert environment (vacuum, noble gas) to
eliminate side reactions
27Hydrogen abstraction tool
28Other molecular tools
29C2 deposition
30Carbene insertion
31Experimental work
H. J. Lee and W. Ho, SCIENCE 286, p. 1719,
NOVEMBER 1999
32Experimental work
Manipulation and bond formation by STM
Saw-Wai Hla et al., Physical Review Letters 85,
2777-2780, September 25 2000
33Self replication
34Complexity (bits)
- Von Neumann's constructor 500,000
- Mycoplasma genitalia 1,160,140
- Drexler's assembler 100,000,000
- Human 6,400,000,000
- NASA over 100,000,000,000
35Self replication
The Von Neumann architecture
Universal Computer
Universal Constructor
http//www.zyvex.com/nanotech/vonNeumann.html
36Self replication
Replicating bacterium
DNA
DNA Polymerase
37Self replication
Drexlers proposal for an assembler
http//www.foresight.org/UTF/Unbound_LBW/chapt_6.h
tml
38Broadcast architecture
Macroscopic computer
http//www.zyvex.com/nanotech/selfRep.html
39Replication
Manufacturing costsper kilogramwill be low
- Today potatoes, lumber, wheat, etc. are all
about a dollar per kilogram. - Tomorrow almost any product will be about a
dollar per kilogram or less. (Design costs,
licensing costs, etc. not included)
40An overview of replicating systemsfor
manufacturing
Replication
- Advanced Automation for Space Missions, edited by
Robert Freitas and William Gilbreath NASA
Conference Publication 2255, 1982 - A web page with an overview of replication
http//www.zyvex.com/nanotech/selfRep.html
41Impact
The impact of a new manufacturing
technology depends on what you make
42Impact
Powerful Computers
- Well have more computing power in the volume of
a sugar cube than the sum total of all the
computer power that exists in the world today - More than 1021 bits in the same volume
- Almost a billion Pentiums in parallel
43Impact
Lighter, stronger, smarter, less expensive
- New, inexpensive materials with a
strength-to-weight ratio over 50 times that of
steel - Critical for aerospace airplanes, rockets,
satellites - Useful in cars, trucks, ships, ...
44Impact
Nanomedicine
- Disease and ill health are caused largely by
damage at the molecular and cellular level - Todays surgical tools are huge and imprecise in
comparison
45Impact
Nanomedicine
- In the future, we will have fleets of surgical
tools that are molecular both in size and
precision. - We will also have computers much smaller than a
single cell to guide those tools.
46Impact
Size of a robotic arm 100 nanometers
8-bit computer
Mitochondrion 1-2 by 0.1-0.5 microns
47Impact
Mitochondrion
Size of a robotic arm 100 nanometers
Typical cell 20 microns
48Typical cell
Mitochondrion
Molecular computer peripherals
49Remove bad things
50Respirocytes
http//www.foresight.org/Nanomedicine/Respirocytes
.html
51Nanomedicine Volume I
- Nanosensors, nanoscale scanning
- Power (fuel cells, other methods)
- Communication
- Navigation (location within the body)
- Manipulation and locomotion
- Computation
- http//www.foresight.org/Nanomedicine
- By Robert Freitas,
52A revolution in medicine
- Today, loss of cell function results in cellular
deterioration - function must be preserved
- With medical nanodevices, passive structures can
be repaired structure must be preserved
53Cryonics
Liquid nitrogen
Temperature
Time
54Payoff matrix
It works
It doesn't
Experimental group www.alcor.org
A very long and healthy life
Die, lose life insurance
Control group
Die
Die
55Public perception
- Thus, like so much else in medicine, cryonics,
once considered on the outer edge, is moving
rapidly closer to reality - ABC News World News Tonight, Feb 8th
- medical advances are giving new credibility
to cryonics. - KRON 4 News, NightBeat, May 3, 2001
56Human impacton the environment
The environment
- Population
- Living standards
- Technology
57Reducing human impacton the environment
The environment
- Greenhouse agriculture/hydroponics
- Solar power
- Pollution free manufacturing
58- Nanotechnology offers ... possibilities for
health, wealth, and capabilities beyond most past
imaginings. - K. Eric Drexler
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