homehome Home chatchat Notifications


MBE machine grows gadgets one atom at a time

Dubbed MBE, after the intricate molecular beam epitaxy process, this device developed by scientists at Sharp Laboratories in Oxford, England, can actually grow electrical components at a dazzling precision atom by atom. This is where razor sharp technology is at, as far as manufacturing goes, and this monstrous-looking device is capable of transferring atoms from […]

Tibi Puiu
July 13, 2011 @ 5:00 pm

share Share

The MBE machine capable of growing gadgets

Dubbed MBE, after the intricate molecular beam epitaxy process, this device developed by scientists at Sharp Laboratories in Oxford, England, can actually grow electrical components at a dazzling precision atom by atom.

This is where razor sharp technology is at, as far as manufacturing goes, and this monstrous-looking device is capable of transferring atoms from one place to another almost individually, as tiny crystalline structures are layered together to form objects and thus build the basis of high tech electronics.

Using the MBE, Sharp engineers were able to build anything from lasers to LEDs and even solar panels. It’s a highly complex and demanding machine, however, one which requires almost space like vacuum inside of the working chamber for components to come out like they’re supposed to. Without vacuum, impurities would make the properties of the layered molecules useless and disrupt the whole process.

Magnetic handles manipulate materials within the MBE

Magnetic handles manipulate materials within the MBE

Inside of it, although perfectly isolated from the rest of the world and trapping a little piece of cosmos into its belly, the whole MBE process is fully controlled by the scientists who can dispose molecules in any they see fit. The whole operation is maneuvered through use of magnetic poles, with a handle on the outside of the MBE, to move the wafer into position. A pyrometer lets operators measure temperature remotely too, and despite being separated by a physical barrier, it’s possible for the scientists to have complete control.

RELATED: Smallest 3D printer

Dr Ian Thompson, Director of Business Development at Sharp Laboratories of Europe explains that “whatever your substrate is, the crystal structure will be what the first atom mimics. Whatever you layer on top follows its orientation.” The process is very controlled and, inside the MBE, a component literally grows before scientists’ eyes through the tiny circular viewing windows along its edge.

An interesting profile of the MBE machine can viewed below directly from one of Sharp’s leading engineers.

source: Human Invent

share Share

Big Tech Said It Was Impossible to Create an AI Based on Ethically Sourced Data. These Researchers Proved Them Wrong

A massive AI breakthrough built entirely on public domain and open-licensed data

World’s Smallest Violin Is No Joke — It’s a Tiny Window Into the Future of Nanotechnology

The tiny etching is smaller than a speck of dust but signals big advances in materials science.

Lawyers are already citing fake, AI-generated cases and it's becoming a problem

Just in case you're wondering how society is dealing with AI.

This New Lens Converts Invisible Infrared Light into Visible Color

An atomic-scale metalens converts infrared into visible light in a single leap

Leading AI models sometimes refuse to shut down when ordered

Models trained to solve problems are now learning to survive—even if we tell them not to.

AI slop is way more common than you think. Here's what we know

The odds are you've seen it too.

Scientists Invented a Way to Store Data in Plastic Molecules and It Could Someday Replace Hard Drives

What if your next hard drive wasn’t a box, but a string of molecules? Synthetic polymers promises to revolutionize data storage.

Meet Cavorite X7: An aircraft that can hover like a helicopter and fly like a plane

This unusual hybrid aircraft has sliding panels on its wings that cover hidden electric fans.

AI is quietly changing how we design our work

AI reshapes engineering, from sketches to skyscrapers, promising speed, smarts, and new creations.

Inside the Great Firewall: China’s Relentless Battle to Control the Internet

On the Chinese internet, a river crab isn’t just a crustacean. It’s code. River crab are Internet slang terms created by Chinese netizens in reference to the Internet censorship, or other kinds of censorship in mainland China. They need to do this because the Great Firewall of China censors and regulates everything that is posted […]