Global Information Lookup Global Information

Molecular assembler information


A molecular assembler, as defined by K. Eric Drexler, is a "proposed device able to guide chemical reactions by positioning reactive molecules with atomic precision". A molecular assembler is a kind of molecular machine. Some biological molecules such as ribosomes fit this definition. This is because they receive instructions from messenger RNA and then assemble specific sequences of amino acids to construct protein molecules. However, the term "molecular assembler" usually refers to theoretical human-made devices.

A ribosome is a biological machine.

Beginning in 2007, the British Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council has funded development of ribosome-like molecular assemblers. Clearly, molecular assemblers are possible in this limited sense. A technology roadmap project, led by the Battelle Memorial Institute and hosted by several U.S. National Laboratories has explored a range of atomically precise fabrication technologies, including both early-generation and longer-term prospects for programmable molecular assembly; the report was released in December, 2007.[1] In 2008, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council provided funding of £1.5 million over six years (£1,942,235.57, $2,693,808.00 in 2021[2]) for research working towards mechanized mechanosynthesis, in partnership with the Institute for Molecular Manufacturing, amongst others.[3]

Likewise, the term "molecular assembler" has been used in science fiction and popular culture to refer to a wide range of fantastic atom-manipulating nanomachines. Much of the controversy regarding "molecular assemblers" results from the confusion in the use of the name for both technical concepts and popular fantasies. In 1992, Drexler introduced the related but better-understood term "molecular manufacturing", which he defined as the programmed "chemical synthesis of complex structures by mechanically positioning reactive molecules, not by manipulating individual atoms".[4]

This article mostly discusses "molecular assemblers" in the popular sense. These include hypothetical machines that manipulate individual atoms and machines with organism-like self-replicating abilities, mobility, ability to consume food, and so forth. These are quite different from devices that merely (as defined above) "guide chemical reactions by positioning reactive molecules with atomic precision".

Because synthetic molecular assemblers have never been constructed and because of the confusion regarding the meaning of the term, there has been much controversy as to whether "molecular assemblers" are possible or simply science fiction. Confusion and controversy also stem from their classification as nanotechnology, which is an active area of laboratory research which has already been applied to the production of real products; however, there had been, until recently,[when?] no research efforts into the actual construction of "molecular assemblers".

Nonetheless, a 2013 paper by David Leigh's group, published in the journal Science, details a new method of synthesizing a peptide in a sequence-specific manner by using an artificial molecular machine that is guided by a molecular strand.[5] This functions in the same way as a ribosome building proteins by assembling amino acids according to a messenger RNA blueprint. The structure of the machine is based on a rotaxane, which is a molecular ring sliding along a molecular axle. The ring carries a thiolate group, which removes amino acids in sequence from the axle, transferring them to a peptide assembly site. In 2018, the same group published a more advanced version of this concept in which the molecular ring shuttles along a polymeric track to assemble an oligopeptide that can fold into an α-helix that can perform the enantioselective epoxidation of a chalcone derivative (in a way reminiscent to the ribosome assembling an enzyme).[6] In another paper published in Science in March 2015, chemists at the University of Illinois report a platform that automates the synthesis of 14 classes of small molecules, with thousands of compatible building blocks.[7]

In 2017, David Leigh's group reported a molecular robot that could be programmed to construct any one of four different stereoisomers of a molecular product by using a nanomechanical robotic arm to move a molecular substrate between different reactive sites of an artificial molecular machine.[8] An accompanying News and Views article, titled 'A molecular assembler', outlined the operation of the molecular robot as effectively a prototypical molecular assembler.[9]

  1. ^ "Productive Nanosystems: A Technology Roadmap" (PDF). Foresight Institute. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-10-25. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  2. ^ "Value of 2008 British Pounds today - Inflation calculator". Inflation Tool. Retrieved September 5, 2021.
  3. ^ "Grants on the Web". Archived from the original on November 4, 2011.
  4. ^ "C&En: Cover Story - Nanotechnology".
  5. ^ Lewandowski, Bartosz; De Bo, Guillaume; Ward, John W.; Papmeyer, Marcus; Kuschel, Sonja; Aldegunde, María J.; Gramlich, Philipp M. E.; Heckmann, Dominik; Goldup, Stephen M. (2013-01-11). "Sequence-Specific Peptide Synthesis by an Artificial Small-Molecule Machine" (PDF). Science. 339 (6116): 189–193. Bibcode:2013Sci...339..189L. doi:10.1126/science.1229753. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 23307739. S2CID 206544961.
  6. ^ De Bo, Guillaume; Gall, Malcolm A. Y.; Kuschel, Sonja; Winter, Julien De; Gerbaux, Pascal; Leigh, David A. (2018-04-02). "An artificial molecular machine that builds an asymmetric catalyst". Nature Nanotechnology. 13 (5): 381–385. Bibcode:2018NatNa..13..381D. doi:10.1038/s41565-018-0105-3. ISSN 1748-3395. PMID 29610529. S2CID 4624041.
  7. ^ Li, J.; Ballmer, S. G.; Gillis, E. P.; Fujii, S.; Schmidt, M. J.; Palazzolo, A. M. E.; Lehmann, J. W.; Morehouse, G. F.; Burke, M. D. (2015). "Synthesis of many different types of organic small molecules using one automated process". Science. 347 (6227): 1221–1226. Bibcode:2015Sci...347.1221L. doi:10.1126/science.aaa5414. PMC 4687482. PMID 25766227.
  8. ^ Kassem, S.; Lee, A. T. L..; Leigh, D. A.; Marcos, V.; Palmer, L. I.; Pisano, S. (2017). "Stereodivergent synthesis with a programmable molecular machine". Nature. 549 (7672): 374–378. Bibcode:2017Natur.549..374K. doi:10.1038/nature23677. PMID 28933436. S2CID 205259758.
  9. ^ Kelly, T. R.; Snapper, M. L. (2017). "A molecular assembler". Nature. 549 (7672): 336–337. doi:10.1038/549336a. PMID 28933435.

and 26 Related for: Molecular assembler information

Request time (Page generated in 0.7903 seconds.)

Molecular assembler

Last Update:

A molecular assembler, as defined by K. Eric Drexler, is a "proposed device able to guide chemical reactions by positioning reactive molecules with atomic...

Word Count : 2590

Molecular nanotechnology

Last Update:

to widespread legend, Drexler never claimed that assembler systems could build absolutely any molecular structure. The endnotes in Drexler's book explain...

Word Count : 6622

Nanotechnology

Last Update:

machines) operating on the molecular scale. Molecular nanotechnology is especially associated with the molecular assembler, a machine that can produce a desired...

Word Count : 8283

Gray goo

Last Update:

Drexler describes gray goo in Chapter 11 of Engines of Creation: Early assembler-based replicators could beat the most advanced modern organisms. 'Plants'...

Word Count : 1627

Mechanosynthesis

Last Update:

an assembler or molecular assembler. Once assemblers exist, geometric growth (directing copies to make copies) could reduce the cost of assemblers rapidly...

Word Count : 2115

Glossary of nanotechnology

Last Update:

small particles. Molecular assembler Also known as an assembler, a molecular assembler is a molecular machine that can build a molecular structure from...

Word Count : 3653

Outline of nanotechnology

Last Update:

lithography – Molecular self-assembly – IBM Millipede – Molecular nanotechnology – Grey goo – Mechanosynthesis – Molecular assemblerMolecular modelling...

Word Count : 1075

Molecular machine

Last Update:

Molecular machines are a class of molecules typically described as an assembly of a discrete number of molecular components intended to produce mechanical...

Word Count : 5804

History of nanotechnology

Last Update:

are hard to control, and that a universal assembler is science fiction. Smalley believed that such assemblers were not physically possible and introduced...

Word Count : 5070

Nanonetwork

Last Update:

the nanoscale are based either on electromagnetic communication or on molecular communication. This is defined as the transmission and reception of electromagnetic...

Word Count : 1909

Molecular biophysics

Last Update:

Collaboration". Molecular Assembler. Alberts B, Johnson A, Lewis J, Raff M, Roberts K, Walters P (2002). "The Shape and Structure of Proteins". Molecular Biology...

Word Count : 2450

Engines of Creation

Last Update:

Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology is a 1986 molecular nanotechnology book written by K. Eric Drexler with a foreword by Marvin Minsky...

Word Count : 468

Nanorobotics

Last Update:

is dominated by large corporations. Manufacturing nanomachines assembled from molecular components is a very challenging task. Because of the level of...

Word Count : 5847

Richard Smalley

Last Update:

don't do it" proudly. He was an outspoken skeptic of the idea of molecular assemblers, as advocated by K. Eric Drexler. His main scientific objections...

Word Count : 3367

Nanoengineering

Last Update:

colloidal materials. 1959: Richard Feynman gave the first lecture on molecular technology and engineering or just nanoengineering. 1981: Gerd Binnig...

Word Count : 672

Molecule

Last Update:

molecules Molecular biology Molecular design software Molecular engineering Molecular geometry Molecular Hamiltonian Molecular ion Molecular modelling...

Word Count : 3697

The Jensen Project

Last Update:

take over other people. To create these nanobots, Edwin needs a molecular assembler, which he steals. With the help of Kendrick James (LeVar Burton)...

Word Count : 616

List of science fiction themes

Last Update:

planetary engineering Megastructures Dyson sphere Molecular manufacturing and Nanotechnology Molecular assembler Alien technology Virtual reality, mixed reality...

Word Count : 772

List of hypothetical technologies

Last Update:

Shellworld Vertical city Bush robot Claytronics Grey goo Mechanosynthesis Molecular assembler Nanocomputer Nanomatrix skyscraper Programmable matter Santa Claus...

Word Count : 1686

Mechanical engineering

Last Update:

becomes nanotechnology—one speculative goal of which is to create a molecular assembler to build molecules and materials via mechanosynthesis. For now that...

Word Count : 6678

Molecular recognition

Last Update:

Journal of Molecular Recognition SAMPL Challenge Noncovalent interactions Supramolecular chemistry Allostery Cooperativity Molecular assembler Knox JR,...

Word Count : 2018

Synthetic biology

Last Update:

According to the European Commission, this possibly involves a molecular assembler based on biomolecular systems such as the ribosome. 1910: First identifiable...

Word Count : 18308

Impact of nanotechnology

Last Update:

to nanoelectronic biosensors, and even possible future applications of molecular nanotechnology. Nanomedicine seeks to deliver a valuable set of research...

Word Count : 3523

Nanobiotechnology

Last Update:

cantilever array sensors and the application of nanophotonics for manipulating molecular processes in living cells. Recently, the use of microorganisms to synthesize...

Word Count : 5086

Nanotechnology in fiction

Last Update:

primary antagonist for the game. In SpaceChem the player has to build molecular assembler/disassemblers using nanomachines called "Waldos" controlled by a...

Word Count : 3187

Santa Claus machine

Last Update:

and those instructions can be given to the machine. 3D printing Molecular assembler Replicator (Star Trek) Fusion torch Schoning, Johannes; Rogers, Yvonne;...

Word Count : 204

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net