Scientists create world's smallest brush (AP) Updated: 2006-05-16 11:02 University of Hawaii
nanotechnology experts have invented the world's smallest brush: a device
boasting bristles a thousand times finer than a strand of human hair.
Mehrdad Ghasemi-Nejhad, a professor of mechanical engineering at the
university, said the brush may be used to sweep nano dust, paint small
micro-tubes and clean pollutants in water.
Nanotechnology involves the manufacture and manipulation of materials at the
molecular or atomic level. At that scale, materials are measured in nanometers
or billionths of a meter.
Ghasemi-Nejhad said the nanotechnology field could allow for the building of
ever smaller chips that would reduce the size and weight of computers while
increasing their speed and memory.
Nanotechnology may also allow for low-cost, better-performing fuel cells that
use hydrogen as clean fuel, he said.
The tiny brush invention has earned the research team, which involves experts
from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y., a spot in the 2007 Guinness
Book of World Records.
"We need to look at the needs in the nano-world, where machines and materials
can be the size of atoms and molecules," said UH doctoral student Vinod P.
Veedu. "As in the 'bigger' world, there are messes to sweep, walls to paint,
tubes to unclog and electronics to power. So our invention ... demonstrates a
way to make the tiniest of brushes to do these jobs."
Ghasemi-Nejhad founded the Hawaii Nanotechnology Laboratory in his UH
department three years ago in part to train workers for a growing
industry.
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