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Gonna make you a star

机译:会让你成为明星

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Dirk wolkmer likes to think small. At the University of Bielefeld, in Germany, where he works as a researcher, he is looking forward to the day when scientists can reliably build robots and electromechanical systems on a microscopic scale―for use in everything from computing to medicine. The problem, he says, is that conventional manufacturing techniques are still far too clumsy to build many of the necessary microscopic components. Now, he and his colleagues are taking their inspiration from tiny marine organisms, the radiolaria, and their exquisitely structured siliceous skeletons. Their work is described in the January edition of the journal Angewandte Chemie. The team realised that these tough little critters are extraordinary chemical conjurers that can turn the main source of silica in salt water, silicic acid, into a myriad of solid shapes and structures. By emulating radiolaria and by mixing the right ingredients, they hope to be able to create micro-components in the test-tube.
机译:德克·沃尔克默(Dirk wolkmer)喜欢小事。他在德国比勒费尔德大学(University of Bielefeld)从事研究工作,他期待着一天,科学家们可以可靠地在微观规模上构建机器人和机电系统,从而将其用于从计算到医学的所有领域。他说,问题在于传统的制造技术仍然太笨拙,无法制造许多必要的微观部件。现在,他和他的同事们从微小的海洋生物,放射虫及其精致的硅质骨骼中汲取了灵感。一月版的《 Angewandte Chemie》中描述了他们的工作。研究小组意识到,这些顽固的小生物是非凡的化学魔术师,可以将盐水,硅酸中的二氧化硅的主要来源转变为无数的固体形状和结构。他们希望通过模拟放射虫并混合正确的成分,希望能够在试管中产生微量成分。

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