 The double-helix property of DNA allows engineers to apply the molecule to electric circuts and logic chips. (Source: www.csb.yale.edu)
 A close up of the waffle-like structure. (Source: EurekAlert!)
DNA might serve as the backbone of the next generation logic chips
The double-helix characteristic of DNA
may soon start to serve a new purpose other than carrying all of
an individual's genetic information. Chris Dwyer, assistant professor
of electrical and computer engineering at Duke's Pratt School of
Engineering, revealed that by mixing customized parts of DNA, along
with other molecules, he could manufacture identical structures
mimicking those of waffles. Not only could he produce one
nanostructure, but billions of them, inexpensively
and quickly.
Instead of silicon chips at the center of a
platform for electric circuits, DNA will be used. The customized
parts of DNA can be synthesized by putting pairs in any order-a very
cheap process.
"It's like taking pieces of a
puzzle, throwing them in a box and as you shake the box, the pieces
gradually find their neighbors to form the puzzle. What we did was to
take billions of these puzzle pieces, throwing them together, to form
billions of copies of the same puzzle," Dwyer said.
Different
light sensitive molecules are added to the nanostructures, after
they efficiently assembled themselves. Chromophores, or light, can
excite the programmable waffles (made up of the synthesized DNA).
"When light is shined on the chromophores, they absorb it,
exciting the electrons," Dwyer says. This energy then
travels to a different type of chromophore located nearby that emits
a light of a specific wavelength. The output light, through a
detector, can easily be differentiated from the input light. The
light can stimulate responses between yes and no, or zeros and ones,
much faster than conventional circuits.
Dwyer's current
experiments included sixteen waffle pieces with the chromophores on
top of the waffle's ridges. By building larger waffles, complex
circuits can be formed. Dwyer said the possibilities are limitless,
ranging from biomedical applications to computational.
The new
study, published in the online journal Small, offers a new idea that
can be translated in many applications-such as medical research.
Dwyer explained that the nanostructures could respond to different
proteins in the blood, like disease markers. The most promising
aspect of the new technology, some might say, is the ease at which
scientists can create such chips or circuits, making them cheaper.
"There is a single light of science, and to brighten it anywhere is to brighten it everywhere." -- Isaac Asimov
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