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![]() by Staff Writers Charlottesville VA (SPX) Aug 03, 2022
Scientists at the University of Virginia School of Medicine and their collaborators have used DNA to overcome a nearly insurmountable obstacle to engineer materials that would revolutionize electronics. One possible outcome of such engineered materials could be superconductors, which have zero electrical resistance, allowing electrons to flow unimpeded. That means that they don't lose energy and don't create heat, unlike current means of electrical transmission. Development of a superconductor that could be used widely at room temperature - instead of at extremely high or low temperatures, as is now possible - could lead to hyper-fast computers, shrink the size of electronic devices, allow high-speed trains to float on magnets and slash energy use, among other benefits. One such superconductor was first proposed more than 50 years ago by Stanford physicist William A. Little. Scientists have spent decades trying to make it work, but even after validating the feasibility of his idea, they were left with a challenge that appeared impossible to overcome. Until now. Edward H. Egelman, PhD, of UVA's Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, has been a leader in the field of cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), and he and Leticia Beltran, a graduate student in his lab, used cryo-EM imaging for this seemingly impossible project. "It demonstrates," he said, "that the cryo-EM technique has great potential in materials research."
Engineering at the Atomic Level Egelman and his collaborators found an answer in the very building blocks of life. They took DNA, the genetic material that tells living cells how to operate, and used it to guide a chemical reaction that would overcome the great barrier to Little's superconductor. In short, they used chemistry to perform astonishingly precise structural engineering - construction at the level of individual molecules. The result was a lattice of carbon nanotubes assembled as needed for Little's room-temperature superconductor. "This work demonstrates that ordered carbon nanotube modification can be achieved by taking advantage of DNA-sequence control over the spacing between adjacent reaction sites," Egelman said. The lattice they built has not been tested for superconductivity, for now, but it offers proof of principle and has great potential for the future, the researchers say. "While cryo-EM has emerged as the main technique in biology for determining the atomic structures of protein assemblies, it has had much less impact thus far in materials science," said Egelman, whose prior work led to his induction in the National Academy of Sciences, one of the highest honors a scientist can receive. Egelman and his colleagues say their DNA-guided approach to lattice construction could have a wide variety of useful research applications, especially in physics. But it also validates the possibility of building Little's room-temperature superconductor. The scientists' work, combined with other breakthroughs in superconductors in recent years, could ultimately transform technology as we know it and lead to a much more "Star Trek" future. "While we often think of biology using tools and techniques from physics, our work shows that the approaches being developed in biology can actually be applied to problems in physics and engineering," Egelman said. "This is what is so exciting about science: not being able to predict where our work will lead."
Research Report:DNA-guided lattice remodeling of carbon nanotubes
![]() ![]() Ultra-thin, high-efficient piezoelectric element generate electricity from daily life movement Daegu, South Korea (SPX) Jul 06, 2022 A research team led by Professor Lee Sung-won of the Department of Physics and Chemistry at DGIST (President: Kuk Yang) succeeded in efficiently obtaining electrical energy from small movements of the human body, such as the blink of an eye, by using biocompatible materials to minimize the device's thickness. The developed energy generating device is expected to be applied as an energy source for remote medical diagnostic devices. As the need for a telemedicine system increases, there has been act ... read more
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