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The Tobacco Virus at 50 nanometers
UCLA Engineering Researcher Uses Plant Virus to Create Memory
Chip
**Story excerpted from a New
Scientist Tech print
edition article by Michael Reilly on October
4, 2006.
Giving your digital camera a virus may not sound
very smart, but a memory chip that incorporates millions of viruses
may just be the fastest thing around.
By coating 30-nanometre-long chunks of tobacco
mosaic virus with platinum nanoparticles, it’s possible
to create a transistor with very fast switching speed. Millions
of these transistors could eventually be used in a memory chip
to replace flash memory in mp3 players and digital cameras, for
example.
A camera fitted with a virus chip would take a
few microseconds to display an image, compared with the milliseconds
taken by existing devices, says Yang Yang of UCLA Engineering,
whose team is working on the virus chip.
The team built a transistor by embedding the coated
virus strips in a polymer matrix, sandwiched between two electrodes
much like a standard transistor. Apply a voltage to the transistor,
and the platinum nanoparticles – roughly 16 per virus –
each donate an electron to proteins on the surface of the virus,
moving the device to an ON state.
When the voltage dips below a certain threshold,
the electrons jump back to the nanoparticle, switching the transistor
to an OFF state.
This process takes just 100 microseconds because
the charge only has to travel 10 nanometres between each nanoparticle
and the surface of the virus. In flash memory chips, a capacitor
is used as a control gate, building up charge to a certain level
before current is able to flow to a second gate.
The device is still some way from practical use
in a memory chip. “Now we need to figure out how to wire
up the viruses,” says Yang. They hope to build a prototype
packed with millions of single-virus transistors within four years.
View Reilly's story on in context on the
New Scientist website here: http://www.newscientisttech.com/article/dn10228-happy-snaps-from-a-virusinfested-chip.html.
Read the United Press International wire story on the
same research: http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/view.php?StoryID=20061005-092929-1895r
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