The next step in nanotechnology | George Tulevski

504,060 views ・ 2017-01-31

TED


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Translator: Leslie Gauthier Reviewer: Joanna Pietrulewicz
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Let's imagine a sculptor building a statue,
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just chipping away with his chisel.
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Michelangelo had this elegant way of describing it when he said,
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"Every block of stone has a statue inside of it,
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and it's the task of the sculptor to discover it."
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But what if he worked in the opposite direction?
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Not from a solid block of stone,
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but from a pile of dust,
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somehow gluing millions of these particles together to form a statue.
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I know that's an absurd notion.
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It's probably impossible.
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The only way you get a statue from a pile of dust
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is if the statue built itself --
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if somehow we could compel millions of these particles to come together
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to form the statue.
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Now, as odd as that sounds,
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that is almost exactly the problem I work on in my lab.
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I don't build with stone,
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I build with nanomaterials.
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They're these just impossibly small, fascinating little objects.
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They're so small that if this controller was a nanoparticle,
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a human hair would be the size of this entire room.
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And they're at the heart of a field we call nanotechnology,
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which I'm sure we've all heard about,
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and we've all heard how it is going to change everything.
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When I was a graduate student,
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it was one of the most exciting times to be working in nanotechnology.
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There were scientific breakthroughs happening all the time.
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The conferences were buzzing,
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there was tons of money pouring in from funding agencies.
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And the reason is
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when objects get really small,
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they're governed by a different set of physics that govern ordinary objects,
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like the ones we interact with.
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We call this physics quantum mechanics.
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And what it tells you is that you can precisely tune their behavior
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just by making seemingly small changes to them,
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like adding or removing a handful of atoms,
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or twisting the material.
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It's like this ultimate toolkit.
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You really felt empowered; you felt like you could make anything.
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And we were doing it --
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and by we I mean my whole generation of graduate students.
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We were trying to make blazing fast computers using nanomaterials.
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We were constructing quantum dots
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that could one day go in your body and find and fight disease.
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There were even groups trying to make an elevator to space
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using carbon nanotubes.
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You can look that up, that's true.
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Anyways, we thought it was going to affect
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all parts of science and technology, from computing to medicine.
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And I have to admit,
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I drank all of the Kool-Aid.
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I mean, every last drop.
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But that was 15 years ago,
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and --
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fantastic science was done, really important work.
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We've learned a lot.
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We were never able to translate that science into new technologies --
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into technologies that could actually impact people.
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And the reason is, these nanomaterials --
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they're like a double-edged sword.
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The same thing that makes them so interesting --
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their small size --
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also makes them impossible to work with.
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It's literally like trying to build a statue out of a pile of dust.
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And we just don't have the tools that are small enough to work with them.
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But even if we did, it wouldn't really matter,
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because we couldn't one by one place millions of particles together
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to build a technology.
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So because of that,
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all of the promise and all of the excitement
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has remained just that: promise and excitement.
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We don't have any disease-fighting nanobots,
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there's no elevators to space,
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and the thing that I'm most interested in, no new types of computing.
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Now that last one, that's a really important one.
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We just have come to expect
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the pace of computing advancements to go on indefinitely.
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We've built entire economies on this idea.
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And this pace exists
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because of our ability to pack more and more devices
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onto a computer chip.
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And as those devices get smaller,
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they get faster, they consume less power
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and they get cheaper.
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And it's this convergence that gives us this incredible pace.
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As an example:
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if I took the room-sized computer that sent three men to the moon and back
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and somehow compressed it --
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compressed the world's greatest computer of its day,
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so it was the same size as your smartphone --
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your actual smartphone,
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that thing you spent 300 bucks on and just toss out every two years,
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would blow this thing away.
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You would not be impressed.
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It couldn't do anything that your smartphone does.
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It would be slow,
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you couldn't put any of your stuff on it,
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you could possibly get through the first two minutes
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of a "Walking Dead" episode if you're lucky --
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(Laughter)
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The point is the progress -- it's not gradual.
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The progress is relentless.
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It's exponential.
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It compounds on itself year after year,
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to the point where if you compare a technology
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from one generation to the next,
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they're almost unrecognizable.
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And we owe it to ourselves to keep this progress going.
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We want to say the same thing 10, 20, 30 years from now:
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look what we've done over the last 30 years.
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Yet we know this progress may not last forever.
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In fact, the party's kind of winding down.
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It's like "last call for alcohol," right?
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If you look under the covers,
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by many metrics like speed and performance,
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the progress has already slowed to a halt.
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So if we want to keep this party going,
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we have to do what we've always been able to do,
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and that is to innovate.
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So our group's role and our group's mission
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is to innovate by employing carbon nanotubes,
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because we think that they can provide a path to continue this pace.
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They are just like they sound.
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They're tiny, hollow tubes of carbon atoms,
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and their nanoscale size, that small size,
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gives rise to these just outstanding electronic properties.
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And the science tells us if we could employ them in computing,
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we could see up to a ten times improvement in performance.
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It's like skipping through several technology generations in just one step.
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So there we have it.
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We have this really important problem
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and we have what is basically the ideal solution.
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The science is screaming at us,
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"This is what you should be doing to solve your problem."
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So, all right, let's get started,
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let's do this.
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But you just run right back into that double-edged sword.
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This "ideal solution" contains a material that's impossible to work with.
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I'd have to arrange billions of them just to make one single computer chip.
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It's that same conundrum, it's like this undying problem.
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At this point, we said, "Let's just stop.
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Let's not go down that same road.
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Let's just figure out what's missing.
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What are we not dealing with?
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What are we not doing that needs to be done?"
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It's like in "The Godfather," right?
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When Fredo betrays his brother Michael,
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we all know what needs to be done.
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Fredo's got to go.
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(Laughter)
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But Michael -- he puts it off.
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Fine, I get it.
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Their mother's still alive, it would make her upset.
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We just said,
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"What's the Fredo in our problem?"
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What are we not dealing with?
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What are we not doing,
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but needs to be done to make this a success?"
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And the answer is that the statue has to build itself.
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We have to find a way, somehow,
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to compel, to convince billions of these particles
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to assemble themselves into the technology.
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We can't do it for them. They have to do it for themselves.
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And it's the hard way, and this is not trivial,
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but in this case, it's the only way.
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Now, as it turns out, this is not that alien of a problem.
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We just don't build anything this way.
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People don't build anything this way.
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But if you look around -- and there's examples everywhere --
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Mother Nature builds everything this way.
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Everything is built from the bottom up.
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You can go to the beach,
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you'll find these simple organisms that use proteins --
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basically molecules --
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to template what is essentially sand,
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just plucking it from the sea
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and building these extraordinary architectures with extreme diversity.
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And nature's not crude like us, just hacking away.
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She's elegant and smart,
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building with what's available, molecule by molecule,
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making structures with a complexity
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and a diversity that we can't even approach.
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And she's already at the nano.
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She's been there for hundreds of millions of years.
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We're the ones that are late to the party.
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So we decided that we're going to use the same tool that nature uses,
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and that's chemistry.
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Chemistry is the missing tool.
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And chemistry works in this case
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because these nanoscale objects are about the same size as molecules,
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so we can use them to steer these objects around,
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much like a tool.
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That's exactly what we've done in our lab.
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We've developed chemistry that goes into the pile of dust,
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into the pile of nanoparticles,
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and pulls out exactly the ones we need.
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Then we can use chemistry to arrange literally billions of these particles
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into the pattern we need to build circuits.
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And because we can do that,
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we can build circuits that are many times faster
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than what anyone's been able to make using nanomaterials before.
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Chemistry's the missing tool,
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and every day our tool gets sharper and gets more precise.
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And eventually --
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and we hope this is within a handful of years --
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we can deliver on one of those original promises.
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Now, computing is just one example.
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It's the one that I'm interested in, that my group is really invested in,
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but there are others in renewable energy, in medicine,
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in structural materials,
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where the science is going to tell you to move towards the nano.
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That's where the biggest benefit is.
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But if we're going to do that,
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the scientists of today and tomorrow are going to need new tools --
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tools just like the ones I described.
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And they will need chemistry. That's the point.
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The beauty of science is that once you develop these new tools,
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they're out there.
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They're out there forever,
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and anyone anywhere can pick them up and use them,
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and help to deliver on the promise of nanotechnology.
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Thank you so much for your time. I appreciate it.
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(Applause)
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