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- <text id=89TT3077>
- <title>
- Nov. 20, 1989: The Incredible Shrinking Machine
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 20, 1989 Freedom!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 108
- The Incredible Shrinking Machine
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Breakthroughs in miniaturization could lead to robots the size
- of a flea
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt
- </p>
- <p> To the naked eye, the object mounted on a postage
- stamp-size wafer and held aloft by a pair of tweezers is all but
- invisible. Even under a bright light, it looks like nothing more
- than a speck of dust. But magnified 160 times in an electron
- microscope, the speck begins to take on shape and function: a
- tiny gear with teeth the size of blood cells. "You have to be
- careful when handling these things," warns Kaigham Gabriel, an
- engineer at AT&T Bell Laboratories. "I've accidentally inhaled
- a few right into my lungs."
- </p>
- <p> The miniaturization of technology, having made
- extraordinary progress in the 40 years since the invention of
- the transistor, is about to make another shrinking leap.
- Adapting the chipmaking equipment used to squeeze millions of
- electrical circuits onto slivers of silicon, researchers are
- creating a lilliputian tool chest of tiny moving parts: valves,
- gears, springs, levers, lenses and ball bearings. One team at
- the University of California, Berkeley, has already built a
- silicon motor not much wider than an eyelash that can rotate 500
- times a minute.
- </p>
- <p> Welcome to the world of microtechnology, where machines the
- size of sand grains are harnessed to do useful work. Huge
- numbers of microscopic sensors are already employed to measure
- the temperature, air pressure and acceleration of airplanes and
- automobiles. Delco Electronics alone sells 7 million silicon
- pressure sensors a year to its parent company, General Motors,
- for use in power-train controls and diagnostics. But scientists
- at Berkeley, Stanford, M.I.T., AT&T, IBM and a handful of other
- research centers around the world see much broader
- possibilities for minuscule machines. They envision armies of
- gnat-size robots exploring space, performing surgery inside the
- human body or possibly building skyscrapers one atom at a time.
- "Microelectronics is on the verge of a second revolution," says
- Jeffrey Lang, a professor of electromechanics at M.I.T. "We're
- still dreaming of applications."
- </p>
- <p> A report to the U.S. National Science Foundation last year
- listed dozens of near-term uses for the new micromachines.
- Among them:
- </p>
- <p> -- Tiny scissors or miniature electric buzz saws to assist
- doctors performing microsurgery.
- </p>
- <p> -- Micro-optical systems to focus lasers to the precision
- required for fiber-optic communication.
- </p>
- <p> -- Miniature machine parts that could drive a new generation
- of tiny tape recorders, camcorders and computers.
- </p>
- <p> Engineers and industrialists are rushing to put the new
- technologies to use. M.I.T. has invested $20 million in a new
- fabrication facility for micromachining and microelectronics.
- Japan's Ministry of International Trade and Industry is
- considering allocating nearly $70 million for the development
- of medical microrobots. "I'm absolutely amazed at how fast this
- field has progressed," says George Hazelrigg, a program director
- at the NSF, the Government agency spearheading the U.S.'s
- micromechanics effort.
- </p>
- <p> Human interest in tiny machines dates back to the clockwork
- toys of the 16th century. But it was not until this century
- that making things smaller became a matter of military and
- economic survival. Spurred by the cold war and the space race,
- U.S. scientists in the late 1950s began a drive to shrink the
- electronics necessary to guide missiles, creating lightweight
- devices for easy launch into space. It was the Japanese,
- though, who saw the value of applying miniature technology to
- the consumer market. In his book Made in Japan, Akio Morita
- tells how he proudly showed Sony's $29.95 transistor radio to
- U.S. retailers in 1955 and was repeatedly asked, as he made the
- rounds of New York City's electronics outlets, "Who needs these
- tiny things?"
- </p>
- <p> American manufacturers eventually learned what the Japanese
- already knew: that new markets can be created by making things
- smaller and lighter. (The popular phrase in Japan is
- kei-haku-tan-sho -- light, thin, short and small.) Ten years
- ago, Black & Decker scored big when it shrank the household
- vacuum cleaner from a bulky 11.2 kg (30 lbs.) to a 0.75-kg
- (2-lb.) device dubbed the Dustbuster. Tandy and Apple Computers
- put the power of a room-size computer into something resembling
- a television-typewriter and created an industry worth $75
- billion a year.
- </p>
- <p> Now these breakthrough products look hopelessly oversize.
- Last month Compaq unveiled a 2.2-kg (6-lb.) full-powered
- portable computer that fits in a briefcase. Sharp and Poqet make
- even smaller models that slip into a suit pocket. Today there
- are fax machines, radar detectors, electronic dictionaries,
- cellular telephones, color televisions, even videotape recorders
- that fit comfortably in the palm of a hand.
- </p>
- <p> With the advent of silicon gears, springs and cantilevers,
- machines will become smaller still. These miniature moving
- parts can be etched on silicon using a variation on the
- photolithographic technique used to make computer chips. To
- build a tiny rotating arm, for example, layers of polysilicon
- and a type of glass that can be removed with acid are deposited
- on a silicon base. A hole for the hub is lined with the glass
- and then filled with polysilicon. When the glass is etched away,
- the hub remains and the arm is free to spin around its axis.
- </p>
- <p> Sensors like those made by Delco were the first to combine
- microelectronics and micromachines on one chip. The typical
- microsensor is a thin silicon diaphragm studded with resistors.
- Because the electrical resistance of silicon crystals changes
- when they are bent, the slightest stress on the diaphragm can
- be registered by the resistors and amplified by electronic
- circuits.
- </p>
- <p> As prices drop, these devices will become ubiquitous. By
- 1995 the typical car may contain as many as 50 silicon sensors
- programmed to control antilock brakes, monitor engine knock and
- trigger the release of safety air bags. Similar sensors are
- already employed in the space shuttle Discovery to measure cabin
- and hydraulic pressures and gauge performance at more than 250
- separate points in the craft's main engines.
- </p>
- <p> Medical applications are also being rapidly developed.
- Researchers at Maryland's Johns Hopkins have made a pill
- slightly larger than a daily vitamin supplement that has a
- silicon thermometer and the electronics necessary to broadcast
- instant temperature readings to a recording device. By having
- a patient swallow the pill, doctors can pinpoint worrisome hot
- spots anywhere within the digestive tract. Future "smart pills"
- may transmit information about heart rates, stomach acidity or
- neural functions. Says Russell Eberhart, program manager at
- Johns Hopkins' Applied Physics Laboratory: "This could change
- the way we diagnose and monitor patients."
- </p>
- <p> Researchers at Tokyo University are pursuing an even more
- ambitious goal. Working under Iwao Fujimasa, an
- artificial-heart specialist, a team of 20 scientists is building
- a robot less than 1 mm (0.045 in.) in diameter that could travel
- through veins and inside organs, locating and treating diseased
- tissue. The group hopes to build a prototype within three years
- for testing on a horse, but the researchers first must obtain
- gears, screws and other parts 1,000 times smaller than the
- tiniest available today.
- </p>
- <p> The ultimate fantasy of the miniaturists is tiny robot
- "assemblers" that could operate at the atomic level, building
- finished goods one molecule at a time. This is the far-reaching
- goal of an embryonic discipline called nanotechnology, so named
- because it would require manipulating objects measured in
- billionths of a meter (nanometers). In Engines of Creation, the
- nanotechnologist's bible, K. Eric Drexler envisions a world in
- which everything from locomotives to cheeseburgers is assembled
- from molecular raw materials, much as proteins are created from
- their amino-acid building blocks by the machinery of a living
- cell.
- </p>
- <p> Working with microscopic machines presents special
- challenges to scientists. Not only do they risk inhaling their
- tools or scattering them with a sneeze, but they also have to
- cope with a new set of physical laws. The problem of friction,
- for instance, looms ever larger as parts get smaller. The
- tiniest dust speck can seem like a boulder. Rotating a
- hair-width dynamo through air molecules, says AT&T's Gabriel,
- "is like trying to spin gears in molasses."
- </p>
- <p> But the payoff can be enormous. As electronics
- manufacturers have discovered, the laws of economics at the
- micro level are as different as the laws of physics. A
- manufacturer might spend a small fortune putting hundreds of
- moving parts and circuits onto a single silicon chip. But when
- that chip goes into large-scale production and millions of
- copies are made, the economies of scale take over, and
- development costs virtually disappear.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, there is a limit to how many transistors can
- be squeezed onto the surface of a chip. Thus the attraction of
- micromachines. They give engineers a way to shrink the moving
- parts of a device rather than trying to shrink its computer
- controls further. Some experts believe that within the next 25
- years micromachinery will do for machines what microelectronics
- did for electronics. Given the progress over the past
- quarter-century, that is saying a lot.
- </p>
- <p>--Scott Brown/San Francisco and Thomas McCarroll/New York
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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