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	By Kenneth Chang 
	12 November 2003 
	  
	 The recipe for a computer chip of the future may read 
	something like this: Take some wires. Add DNA. Stir. 
	 
	In an advance that might provide a practical method for
	making molecular-size circuits, the smallest possible, 
	scientists in Israel used strands of DNA, the computer code
	of life, to create tiny transistors that can literally 
	build themselves.  
	 
	"What we've done is to bring biology to self-assemble an
	electronic device in a test tube," said Dr. Erez Braun, a 
	professor of physics at the Technion-Israel Institute of
	Technology in Haifa, Israel, and a senior author of a paper 
	describing the research today in the journal Science.
	Scientists have in the last few years accomplished feats of
	the incredibly small, constructing devices not much larger
	than individual molecules, but they also realize that their
	current painstaking techniques are too slow and
	inefficient.  
	 
	"In order to construct a circuit," Dr. Braun said, "you
	need to invent ways to tell molecules where to go and how 
	to connect to each other."
	To that end, many scientists have turned to the
	biologically inspired notion of self-assembly, using
	molecules like DNA and proteins that can automatically link
	together in the correct configuration. 
	 
	"It's all of the dynamics on that scale rather than just
	making small stuff," Dr. Horst Stormer, a professor of 
	physics at Columbia, said. Dr. Stormer, who was not involved in the new research,
	described the work as a "good first step" toward
	self-assembling electronic devices.
	The Technion-Israel scientists constructed transistors out
	of carbon nanotubes, cylindrical molecules that are about
	one ten-millionth of an inch in diameter and resemble
	rolled-up chicken wire. 
	 
	Current computer chip technology, which fashions
	transistors out of silicon, will hit fundamental limits in
	about a decade. To continue the progression toward ever
	faster computers, many scientists are looking to molecular
	electronics like the nanotube transistors to step in.
	Other researchers have made similar transistors, which
	already perform better than their silicon counterparts. But
	making them in quantity is a major unsolved challenge. 
	 
	In the earliest work, the nanotubes were randomly placed.
	By chance, some made the correct electrical connections.
	Since then, researchers have looked for a more practical
	way to wire together the billions of transistors that would
	be needed for a computer chip. Scientists at Duke
	University reported in August that they had coated DNA with
	silver to produce ultrathin wires. The Israeli group is the
	first to use DNA to build a working electronic device. 
	 
	"It's a very interesting demonstration of a completely new
	concept of assembling devices," said Dr. Cees Dekker, a
	professor of physics at the Delft University of Technology
	in the Netherlands who research group made the first nanotube transistor in 1998.
	The new technique takes advantage of a biological process
	known as recombination, where a segment of DNA is swapped
	out for an almost identical piece. The cell uses
	recombination to repair damaged DNA and to swap genes. A
	special protein helps connect the replacement DNA to the
	desired location.  
	 
	By attaching a nanotube to the protein, the nanotube moves
	to an exact location along the DNA strand.
	"The DNA serves as a scaffold, a template that will
	determine where the carbon nanotubes will sit," Dr. Braun
	said. "That's the beauty of using biology."
	The scientists then coated the DNA with gold, producing a
	simple electronic device consisting of the nanotube
	connected to gold wires at each end. Current through the nanotube could be switched on or off by applying an
	electric field - the definition of a transistor. 
	 
	In earlier work, the same researchers showed that they
	could stretch DNA across a surface to provide a template to
	hook together the transistors into a circuit. The next step
	would be to build the circuit, Dr. Braun said. 
	 
	Other groups are looking at alternative ways to build
	molecular circuits. Dr. Dekker's group now lays catalyst 
	that will grow nanotubes at desired places. He is also
	exploring using DNA, although using a different approach. 
	DNA molecules attached at the end of nanotubes would act
	like "smart glue." Each strand would be able to attach to
	only one other strand.
	"It's programmable Velcro," Dr. Dekker said. 
	  
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