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Silicon and Sun (MIT Tech. Rev., marine sponge silica for PV)

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jpak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-12-06 02:59 PM
Original message
Silicon and Sun (MIT Tech. Rev., marine sponge silica for PV)
http://technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=17726&ch=energy

In his beachfront office overlooking the Santa Barbara channel, Daniel Morse carefully unwraps one of his prized specimens. An intricate latticework of gleaming glass fibers, it looks like a piece of abstract art or a detailed architectural model of a skyscraper. But it's actually the skeleton of one of the most primitive multicellular organisms still in existence--a species of marine sponge commonly known as Venus's flower basket. Morse, a molecu­lar biologist at the University of California, Santa Barbara, wants to know how such a simple creature can assemble such a complicated structure. And then he wants to put that knowledge to work, making exotic structures of his own.

The lowly sponge has come up with a remarkable solution to a problem that has puzzled the world's top chemists and materials scientists for decades: how to get simple inorganic materials, such as silicon, to assemble themselves into complex nano- and microstructures. Currently, making a microscale device--say, a transistor for a microchip--means physically carving it out of a slab of silicon; it is an expensive and demanding process. But nature has much simpler ways to make equally complex microstructures using nothing but chemistry--mixing together compounds in just the right combination. The sponge's method is particularly elegant. Sitting on the seabed thousands of meters below the surface of the western Pacific, the sponge extracts silicic acid from the surrounding seawater. It converts the acid into silicon dioxide--silica--which, in a remarkable feat of biological engineering, it then assembles into a precise, three-dimensional structure that is reproduced in exact detail by every member of its species.

What makes the sponges' accomplishment so impressive, says Morse, is that it doesn't require the toxic chemicals and high temperatures necessary for human manufacture of complex inorganic structures. The sponge, he says, can assemble intricate structures far more efficiently than engineers working with the same semiconductor materials.

This primitive creature and a number of other marine organisms have become an inspiration for researchers who hope to find simpler and cheaper ways to build inorganic structures, such as semiconductor devices, for use in computer microchips, advanced materials, and solar cells. The goal is to make silicon and other inorganics self-assemble into working electronics in the same way that the sponge assembles silica into complex shapes (see "Others in Bio-Inspired Materials,"). Energy-intensive, billion-dollar semiconductor fabrication facilities might then be replaced by vats of reacting compounds. But while practical industrial processes are still some way off, scientists are coming to understand how sponges and other sea creatures perform their microengineering miracles.

<more>
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tomreedtoon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-12-06 04:54 PM
Response to Original message
1. And soon they'll create the T-1000 Terminator!
Really, has DU become Popular Science or something? I've seen a lot of posts about blue-sky, researcher-cocaine-fantasy science projects here in the last month. None of this tech ever comes true, especially not in a way that's practical.

Remember DMSO? The stuff derived from trees that soaked through the skin, to deliver drugs without injection? That turned out to be a false lead. Posts like this should really go over to www.theonion.com for proper distribution.
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jpak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-12-06 04:57 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. You're right
R&D sucks

:evilgrin:
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tomreedtoon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-13-06 01:32 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. No, guys, REPORTING on research sucks!
All these stories have some reporter reading a research story, and blue-skying some development, sending it to an artist to draw up for a pretty cover, and raising hopes that fall through.

Remember when "Popular Science" predicted that we'd have superhighways across America with the minimum speed limit of 200 MPH, and only special performance-proven cars and drivers would be allowed to use them? Remember all the home-based flying vehicles they've pushed in the past?

There is a vast difference between research and production of a product. There's also a vast difference between honestly reporting on a discovery and going off to Cloud Cuckoo Land, which is what this report did. Okay, yokels, do we understand each other now?
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jpak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-13-06 01:46 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. Yokels???? The study was funded by the NSF and NSF doesn't "do" junk science
Also, this article was published in MIT Technology Review - that's the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Technology Review - not The Onion.

And DMSO is not a shining example of "reseach" either...

It was an urban-legend folk-medicine craze - not the result of biomedical research.

and Man Was Not Meant To FLY!!!!!

:evilgrin:
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Ready4Change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-12-06 09:29 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Yes, all research is wasted effort.
Nothing ever comes from all this research. It's all wasted effort and money. After all, if any of it ever produced anything worthwhile, we wouldn't still be living in caves and eating raw meat.

Hah! That guy who wanted to heat meat over that burning log the lightning set on fire? What a nut! God knows we humans can NEVER find any way to use what nature presents us.
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