The Ruse and the reality of
nanotechnology.
by Wolkow, Robert A.
Nanotechnology doesn't exist yet--not substantially--not
compared to what's coming.
What exists today is nano-science. And it is the many, diverse, and
substantial developments in nano-science that have created the buzz
about future nanotechnology. The ability to literally see individual
atoms, touch them, and even move at them at will, and the knowledge that
electricity works differently when run through the tiniest wires, and
the prospect of astoundingly small consumption of power and materials
during the construction and use of nano-devices--those are the things
creating the excitement. And the excitement is well-founded. There are
many reasons to believe a nano-based technological revolution is coming.
Unfortunately, as happens when a complex subject gets summarized,
some misconceptions have been popularized. There is a common notion now
that anything will be possible given the new eyes and the new hands of
the nanotechnologist. Fanciful pictures of "nanoassemblers,"
popularized by Eric Drexler promote that notion, but they are
misleading, Chemistry is like a chess game. Just as rooks, pawns, and
knights must move according to their own unique rules, particular
elements must also obey fundamental and idiosyncratic bonding
characteristics that no process or tool will allow us to violate.
Still, while nanotechnology is more constrained than some have
suggested, there remains a vast scope for defining materials'
properties and for creating complex functional assemblies using the new
tools of nano-science. What are those tools? Certainly advanced
microscopes are essential, but a great number of other techniques and
approaches, not least theoretical methods, are indispensable too. As
ever, the application of appropriate techniques to create directive
feedback on preparative processes is key. Increasingly, we have a finer
sense of the various constituents that make up any sample under study.
This is a crucial aspect of nano-science--we see not only average
properties, we also see the unique constituents that make up the
average. My colleagues and I study particular states in silicon that
have always been present but were previously impossible to see. Once we
found those states could be recognized, we then learned to create them
at will. We subsequently deployed those states to serve in radically new
ways. The states we explored have been known for half a century as
defects that inhibit traditional transistor operation. It turns out that
the same entities are a benefit to (actually, the very core of) a new
nano-scale transistor concept.
This selective strategy isn't unfamiliar. When we need a
carpenter, we hire a carpenter--we don't hire 130 people knowing
that 1 out of 130 people are carpenters and then ask the whole group to
fix our door. But that's the way we employ materials today.
Nano-science will allow more selective, and therefore improved and
efficient use of materials for the particular job at hand.
Robert A. Wolkow, MCIC, holds the iCORE Chair of Nanoscale
Information and Communications Technologies and is a professor of
Physics at the University of Alberta. He is also principal research
officer and Molecular Scale Devices program leader at the National
Institute for Nanotechnology in Edmonton, AB.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Chemical Institute of
Canada Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.