What Is Nanotechnology And How Does It Work? – SlashGear
So how does all of this work? Well, that’s still something of an open question. Part of the difficulty lies in being able to distinguish between raw materials — individual atoms or molecules — and the nanomachines that are manipulating them. That’s because the machines are themselves made up of atoms and molecules that interact with the materials very differently than something at the macroscale like a robotic arm. Nanomachines can’t grip and lift and push in the same way due to the powerful effects of electrochemistry at that scale.
However, those hurdles can also provide new opportunities. For example, Cas9 is an enzyme capable of following instructions to cut a strand of DNA in a specific place. Scientists have figured out how to use this natural nanomachine to precisely repair damaged DNA. This demonstrates that, at least in principle, atoms and molecules can be arranged in such as way as to act like controllable machines at the nanoscale. And if one nanomachine can exist, so can others.
An important area of interest is self-replicating nanobots. The goal of these machines would be to build more copies of themselves. A single nanobot manipulating one atom at a time would take unpractically long to assemble anything sizable, but a single nanobot that could make a copy of itself in an hour would wind up with over 16 million copies of itself after a day thanks to exponential growth, and these machines could then work together to assemble larger products in less time. That’s the hope, anyway.
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