Title: Respirocytes from Patterned Atomic Layer Epitaxy:
1- Respirocytes from Patterned Atomic Layer Epitaxy
- The Most Conservative Pathway to the
- Simplest Medical Nanorobot
- Tihamer Toth-Fejel
- Tihamer.Toth-Fejel gd-ais.com
-
- 2nd Unither Nanomedical and Telemedicine
Technology Conference - Quebec, Canada
- February 24-27, 2009
2Contents
- Technology
- Productive Nanosystems
- Bio-mimetic
- Scanning Probes
- Tip-Based Nanofabrication
- Patterned Atomic Layer Epitaxy
- Application
- Freitas Respirocytes
- Requirements
- Respirocyte subsystems
3Productive Nanosystems
- Size matters, atomic precision matters more.
- Automated nanoscale tools are most important.
- A closed loop of nanoscale components that make
nanoscale components - Approaches
- Biomimetic methods
- Protein engineering
- Bis-amino acid solid-phase self-assembly
- Structural DNA
- Scanning Probe Techniques
- Diamond Mechanosynthesis
- Patterned Atomic Layer Epitaxy
4Protein engineering
Difficult must solve protein folding
problem Sensitive to small changes in sequence or
environment Low temperature process, but low
performance properties
5Bis-amino acid Solid-phase Self-assembly
- Protein engineering
- Bis-amino acid Solid-phase Self-assembly
- Structural DNA
C. Schafmeister, Molecular Lego, Scientific
American, Feb 2007, 64-71
6Structural DNA
50 billion Smiley Faces in two hours By 1 person
with a glorified kitchen oven
Paul W. K. Rothemund, Folding DNA to create
nanoscale shapes and patterns, Nature Vol 440,16
March 2006
Courtesy Paul Rothemund
7Pixelated DNA and Positioning
Ke, et. al., Self-Assembled Water-Soluble Nucleic
Acid Probe Tiles for Label-Free RNA Hybridization
Assays, Science, Jan 11, 2008
courtesy Paul W. K. Rothemund
8Diamondoid Mechanosynthesis
Adding two carbon atoms at a time Theory
confirmed by 100,000 hours CPU time 2009
experiment funded by UK EPSRC
9Tip-Based Nanofabrication
- DARPAs Goal
- Automated, parallel nanofabrication
- Position, size, shape, and orientation
- In-situ detection repair
- AFM/STM or similar scanning probes
10TBN with Lasers
300nm
- 35 ns pulse
- NSOM based ablation
- FWHM of 90 nm
- Film of unsintered, 13 nm gold nanoparticle
encapsulated by hexanethiol
11TBN with Dip Pen Nanolithography Scanning Probe
Epitaxy
- Reader tip integrated with synthesis tip
- Dual-tip scanning probes combine contact and
non-contact modes - Core-filled tip with aperture controls
nanostructure deposition - Control where, when, and how a reaction occurs on
the nanometer scale - 15 nm limit (so far)
12Tip-Based NanofabricationAtomically Precise
Manufacturing
- Produce 3D structures with top-down control and
atomic precision. - Inevitable result of continued improvements in
ultra-precision manufacturing - Integration of known techniques
- General manufacturing process
13Patterned Si ALE
A precursor gas is used to dose the surface.
Protected Si atoms are deposited only where H has
been removed.
Completed deposition is verified and then the
deprotection/patterning is repeated.
STM tip removes H atoms from the Si surface
14Patterned Si ALE
Joe Lyding UIUC
15Patterned Si ALE
Room Temperature 10-8 Torr disilane 10
minutes/row 5V, 1nA 7V .1nA 6V 1nA 6nm high
features
Joe Lyding UIUC
16Tip Arrays
- MEMS
- 55,000 tips
- 15 nm resolution
- Fast
17Freitas Respirocytes
- Atomically Precise Diamondoid
- 1000 nm (1 µm) 1000 atm
- Requirements Analysis What How
- Subsystems
18Red Blood Cell Function
19Hemoglobin
- O2 not soluble in water
- Four hemes one O2 each
- 68,000 daltons
- Lasts longer more effective inside cells
20Hemoglobin Saturation
- 150 quintillion (1018) hemoglobin molecules in
100 ml whole blood - Binding regulated by O2 partial pressure
Hemoglobin Saturation
partial pressure oxygen (mm Hg)
21Hemoglobin Saturation Bohr Effect
- Lower pH -gt lower saturation
- Higher CO2 -gt more oxygen delivered
- Higher temperature also shifts curve right
Hemoglobin Saturation
partial pressure oxygen (mm Hg)
22Oligosaccharide and Rhesus Protein Coating
23Perfluorocarbons
- PFCs dissolve gt 100x O2 than blood serum
- PFCs are hydrophobic require emulsifiers
- Perfluorocarbons surrounded by a surfactant
(lecithin) - Up to twice as efficient as RBC (at high partial
pressure) - No refrigeration required
- 1/40th size of RBC
- May increase risk of stroke in cardiac patients
- Short term (hours)
24Respirocyte Subsystems
- Pressure Vessels
- Pumps
- Power
- Communications
- Sensors
- Onboard Computation
251000 nm Spherical Pressure Vessels
APM Diamond 1,000,000 MPa 5 nm (30 carbon
atoms) walls 10,000 atm (but diminishing returns
after 1000 atm) Silicon (Crystalline, low
defects) 30,000 MPa 10 nm walls 1,400 atm Blood
cells (or serum PFCs) 0.51 atm 0.13 atm
deliverable to tissues (less for PFCs)
26Location Dependent Pressure
27Ratiometric Oxygen Nanosensor
Ruthenium-DPP (Oxygen sensitive dye)
PEBBLE nanosensor
Oregon Green Dye
28Nanoscale pH Sensor
- Zinc Oxide Nanowires
- AlGaN/GaN junctions
- Field tested outdoors
29Selective Pumps
Water Pump
30 Neon Pump
31Selective PumpCombined motor and rotor
- Sodium-Potassium Exchange Pump
- Small (12 nm diameter)
- 17 RMP (no load)
- 100 picoNewtons
- Runs on ATP
- Elegant
- Difficult to integrate with silicon shell
32 Selective Oxygen Rotor
Oxygen released by Hemoglobin
Oxygen bound by Hemoglobin
Lower pH higher temperature mechanisms
6 nm
33 Cascaded Selective Rotors
34Kinesin
2 ATP/cycle 2 steps/cycle(rotation/slide) 16 nm
per cycle 100 steps/second 5 picoNewtons 40
efficient
35 Kinesin-based Motors
36 Glucose ? ATP
PH
Three out of 10 enzymes have been attached
40 efficient
37 Carbon Dioxide Return
- Carbonic anhydrase
- 1 million times faster
- 30,000 daltons
- Issues
- Detecting CO2 presence
- Getting CO2 out of heme
38 Bicarbonate Sequestering
CmpA Protein Highly selective 452 residues
52,000 daltons
39 Selective Carbon Dioxide Rotor
HCO3 captured by CmpA
HCO3 released by CmpA
Location switch
CO2 catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase
5 nm
40Non-Selective Pumps
3-valve peristaltic Micropump Piezoelectric 100
V (peak-to-peak) 100 Hz 17.6 microliters/minute
41Selective Membranes
Denissov, Molecular Sieves for Gas Separating
Membranes
42ComputationQuantum Dot Cellular Automata
- Arbitrary Boolean logic
- Single electron charge
- Very low power consumption
43Production Issues
- By 2012 Ten million atoms/hour (silicon)
- Nanoimprint lithography
- Multiple materials
- ALE does not work for complex proteins
- Bootstrapping
- Small STM arrays build larger STM arrays
- Build fabrication and assembly lines
- Smaller vacuum chambers
44Thank you!
- Questions?
- Tihamer Toth-Fejel
- Tihamer.Toth-Fejel gd-ais.com