All the latest UK technology news, reviews and analysis

Boffins discover nanotube-producing bacteria

by Ian Williams

10 Dec 2007

Be the first to comment

  • Tweet this

Two engineers at the University of California, Riverside are part of a team that has found living bacteria which produce semi-conducting nanotubes, a discovery that could help in the creation of a new generation of nano-electronic devices.

The team, including Nosang Myung, associate professor of chemical and environmental engineering, and his postdoctoral researcher Bongyoung Yoo, believes this is the first time nanotubes have been shown to be produced by biological rather than chemical means.

This process opens the door to the possibility of cheaper and more environmentally friendly manufacture of electronic materials.

The team found the bacterium Shewanella facilitates the formation of arsenic-sulfide nanotubes that have unique physical and chemical properties not produced by chemical agents.

"We have shown that a jar with a bug in it can create potentially useful nanostructures," said Myung.

"Nanotubes are of particular interest in materials science because the useful properties of a substance can be finely tuned according to the diameter and the thickness of the tubes."

According to Myung, the whole realm of electronic devices which power our world currently depend on chemical manufacturing processes which use tremendous energy, and leave behind toxic metals and chemicals.

The nanotubes produced by the bacteria behave as metals with electrical and photoconductive properties. According to the researchers, these properties could be used in the next generation of semiconductors in nano- and opto-electronic devices.

Although the process is not yet fully understood, it seems that the Shewanella bacterium secretes polysacarides that produce the template for the arsenic sulfide nanotubes, Myung explained.

The practical significance of this technique would be much greater if a bacterial species were identified that could produce nanotubes of cadmium sulfide or other superior semiconductor materials, he added.

"This is just a first step that points the way to future investigation," he said.

"Each species of Shewanella might have individual implications for manufacturing properties."

Do you agree?

 

Add your comment

We won't publish your address
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions. Your comment will be moderated before publication.

Poll

Flame virus poll

Are you confident that the UK's IT infrastructure is secure from attack in the wake of the Flame malware revelations?

34%

1%

11%

54%

Connect with V3.co.uk

Sign up to our daily or weekly newsletters

Symanteccloud

Social networking: a guide for IT managers

Social networking is almost ubiquitous. This white paper examines the benefits and risks and it looks at the different ways companies can reconcile them

Riverbed

Mitigating the risks of IT change

The importance of understanding your infrastructure

Global Project/Programme Manager-with recruitment deployment experienc

My London client is looking for an experienced Programme...

PHP Developers (All Levels)

My leading client is looking for a number of excellent...

Group Services Manager - Telecoms

My client, a leading international name in Manufacturing...

Automated PHP Developer

My client is looking for an Automated Engineer/Developer...

To send to more than one email address, simply separate each address with a comma.