Waterloo Region Record

Nanotech guitar pedal mimics tubes

Scientists create commercial ‘molecular’ product for guitars to replace tube amplifiers.”

- Bob Weber

EDMONTON — For years, serious guitar players have clung to their tube amplifiers, saying the rich sound is worth the hassle of old-school electronic­s.

Now, scientists at the University of Alberta have used the latest nanotechno­logy in a guitar pedal that duplicates that beloved tone without the inconvenie­nce and expense.

“People generally use the word ‘warmer,’” said Rick McCreery, a University of Alberta chemistry professor and researcher at Edmonton’s National Institute for Nanotechno­logy.

Most consumer electronic­s, including non-tube guitar amps, depend on siliconbas­ed devices called transistor­s or diodes. They work extremely well to help amplify electronic signals accurately and smoothly.

Too accurately, for many finely tuned musical ears. The sound of silicon lacks the rich harmonics and overtones added when a signal goes through a non-linear circuit, such as a tube.

“If you take an ordinary electric guitar and just amplify it, then guitarists would say this is sterile,” McCreery said. “Guitarists didn’t like the silicon because it was too linear, too accurate. It didn’t generate nice harmonics.”

Tubes, however, are fragile and expensive to replace.

Adam Bergren, McCreery’s colleague and an amateur guitarist, knew that. He also knew that electronic circuits at the molecular scale have characteri­stics different from the straight-line response of silicon. At that scale, the rules of physics are different.

Together, they and their colleagues developed a circuit just a couple of molecules — billionths of a metre — thick. The team eventually created a non-linear circuit in a guitar pedal that responded just like a tube.

That pedal, dubbed the “Nanolog” and built in Edmonton, is already commercial­ly available. It makes its industry debut this week at the National Associatio­n of Music Manufactur­ers in California, the largest such trade show in the world.

McCreery said their new business, Nanolog Audio, hopes to sell complete pedals and license the nanocircui­try to industry majors such as Fender or Boss.

The guitar pedal market is worth $100 million a year in the U.S. alone.

McCreery says the Nanolog is one of the first consumer products available to use this type of nanotechno­logy. A previous pedal, called the Heisenberg and also developed in Edmonton, was released last year on a limited basis.

Guitar heroes are far from the only possible beneficiar­y from this type of circuit, said McCreery. Durable and reasonably priced, it could replace silicon in thousands of pieces of consumer electronic­s from stereo amps to cellphones.

Unlike silicon, the nanoscale circuit can be tuned to reflect whatever characteri­stics manufactur­ers desire, he said.

The Nanolog also underscore­s the importance of basic scientific research. McCreery said the first patents on the circuit date back to 2004 and researcher­s were working in the field for years before that.

“Basic research can have a fairly long incubation period,” he said.

“I never intended to make music devices when I started doing this. It’s not easy to tell what basic research is going to do for you.”

I never intended to make music devices when I started doing this.” — Nanotechno­logy researcher Rick McCreery

 ?? JOHN ULAN, UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Rick McCreery, left, University of Alberta chemistry professor and Adam Bergen, a former post-doctoral fellow are among scientists who have used the latest in nanotechno­logy in a guitar pedal to duplicate a tube amplifier.
JOHN ULAN, UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA, THE CANADIAN PRESS Rick McCreery, left, University of Alberta chemistry professor and Adam Bergen, a former post-doctoral fellow are among scientists who have used the latest in nanotechno­logy in a guitar pedal to duplicate a tube amplifier.

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