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Prepared by Chris
Phoenix This page provides supplemental information to the presentation made by CRN before the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Science Advisory Board on December 11, 2003. The ProblemNanotechnology may lead to a breakthrough manufacturing technology. Some projected implications have been extreme enough to inspire disbelief and fear. The resulting lack of attention and active opposition are unfortunate, because limited versions may be developed in the next decade, and may require proactive environmental policy attention. The TechnologyFact: Mechanical systems can do precisely positioned, covalent
chemistry in vacuum. (MORE) If the stated theory is correct, mechanical chemistry can form the basis of a general-purpose fully automated manufacturing system capable of directly fabricating additional manufacturing systems, and also capable of manufacturing large products with nanoscale features and atomic precision. Such a system would be cheap to operate, and manufacturing capability could be increased exponentially at low cost. Incentives and Timeline for DevelopmentThe difficulty of developing a molecular manufacturing system depends on how much chemistry will be required for general-purpose (not “universal”) manufacturing. It appears that a useful manufacturing system could be made with just carbon-lattice chemistry, requiring a small number of reactions on stiff (predictable) substrates. We estimate that with sufficient effort, such a system might be developed as early as 2010. (MORE) Rapid-prototyping systems such as plastic-jet “printing” are
developing toward general-purpose manufacturing. Lithography and biomimetic
engineering are also potential competitors. But diamondoid molecular manufacturing
is expected to be orders of magnitude better in several ways: stronger and
more diverse materials, smaller feature sizes, more compact functionality,
and more efficient manufacturing. (MORE) Ecological Impacts of General-purpose Molecular ManufacturingSmall products: The ability to build small-format products intended for use in unconfined environments, including medical and surveillance devices, implies the accumulation of nano-litter. The smallest devices could be considered nanoparticles. (MORE) Increased consumption: If manufacturing gets very cheap, people
will use more products. High-tech products tend to use a lot of power. (MORE) Broader Policy IssuesHow could portable general-purpose manufacturing be regulated? (MORE)
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