London, April 24 (Inditop) Tracking something as elusive as a single molecule has been made possible by minute strings that resonate in characteristic fashion.
If a molecule docks onto one of the strings, then it becomes heavier, and its oscillations become measurably slower.
Until recently, however, such ‘nano-electromechanical systems’ or NEMS, have been short of practical applications. Physicists at Ludwig-Maximilians-University (LMU), Munich have now made a breakthrough in this field.
They have constructed a system of nanostrings made of non-conducting material, where each string can be electrically excited, separately.
Thousands of these strings can be produced on a small chip. One of the devices that could be created with this system is a highly sensitive “artificial nose” that detects various molecules individually (for example pollutants), said an LMU release.
These new NEMS could also be used in a multitude of other applications – acting as tiny pulse generators in mobile phone clocks, for example.