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    sadjfgakjs. CRN Science & Technology Essays - 2004 "Four stages of acceptance:
    1) this is worthless nonsense; 2) this is an interesting ...

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Sadjfgakjs

Submitted by melen on November 5, 2005

Category: Technology
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CRN Science & Technology Essays - 2004

"Four stages of acceptance: 1) this is worthless nonsense; 2) this is an interesting, but perverse, point of view; 3) this is true, but quite unimportant; 4) I always said so." — Geneticist J.B.S. Haldane, on the stages scientific theory goes through

Each month, the C-R-Newsletter features a brief article explaining technical aspects of advanced nanotechnology. They are gathered in these archives for your review. If you have comments or questions, please email Research Director Chris Phoenix.

1. Sub-wavelength Imaging (January 2004)
2. Nucleic Acid Engineering (February 2004)
3. The Power of Molecular Manufacturing (March 2004)
4. Science vs. Engineering vs. Theoretical Applied Nanotechnology (April 2004)
5. The Bugbear of Entropy (May 2004)
6. Engineering, Biology, and Nanotechnology (June 2004)
7. Scaling Laws—Back to Basics (July 2004)
8. Living Off-Grid With Molecular Manufacturing (August 2004)
9. Coping with Nanoscale Errors (September 2004)
10. Many Options for Molecular Manufacturing (November 2004)
11. Planar Assembly—A better way to build large nano-products (December 2004)

2005 Essays Archive



Planar Assembly—A better way to build large nano-products
by Chris Phoenix, CRN Director of Research

This month's essay is adapted from a paper I wrote recently for my NIAC grant, explaining why planar assembly, a new way to build large products from nano-sized building blocks, is better and simpler than convergent assembly.

History

Molecular manufacturing promises to build large quantities of nano-structured material, quickly and cheaply. However, achieving this requires very small machines, which implies that the parts produced will also be small. Combining sub-micron parts into...

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