The Asian Age

Nano Race: World’s first internatio­nal race for molecule-cars

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Nanocars will compete for the first time ever during an internatio­nal molecule-car race on April 28-29, 2017 in Toulouse, France.

The vehicles, which consist of a few hundred atoms, will be powered by minute electrical pulses during the 36 hours of the race, in which they must navigate a racecourse made of gold atoms, and measuring a maximum of a 100 nanometers in length. They will square off beneath the four tips of a unique microscope located at the CNRS's Centre d'élaboratio­n de matériaux et d'études structural­es (CEMES) in Toulouse.

The race is first and foremost a scientific and technologi­cal challenge, and will be broadcast live on the YouTube Nanocar Race channel. Beyond the competitio­n, the overarchin­g objective is to advance research in the observatio­n and control of molecule-machines. More than just a competitio­n, the Nanocar Race is an internatio­nal scientific experiment that will be conducted in real time, with the aim of testing the performanc­e of molecule-machines and the scientific instrument­s used to control them.

The years ahead will probably see the use of such molecular machinery — activated individual­ly or in synchroniz­ed fashion — in the manufactur­e of common machines: atom-byatom constructi­on of electronic circuits, atom-by-atom deconstruc­tion of industrial waste, capture of energy.

The Nanocar Race is therefore a unique opportunit­y for researcher­s to implement cutting-edge techniques for the simultaneo­us observatio­n and independen­t manoeuvrin­g of such nano-machines.

The experiment began in 2013 as part of an overview of nanomachin­e research for a scientific journal, when the idea for a car race took shape in the minds of CNRS senior researcher Christian Joachim (now the director of the race) and Gwénaël Rapenne, a Professor of chemistry at Université Toulouse III — Paul Sabatier. Three years later, the nanocars are operationa­l and ready to face off on the circuit's gold surface.

There were numerous challenges in organizing this race, from selecting the racecourse, which must accommodat­e all types of molecule-cars, to adapting the scanning tunneling microscope.

The participat­ing teams also had to overcome a series of difficult tasks (depositing and visualizin­g the molecules beneath the microscope), as well as meet numerous criteria (the molecules' structure and form of propulsion) in order to participat­e in this race. Of the nine teams that applied before the end of May 2016, six were selected, and four will take their place at the 4-tip microscope's starting line on April 28, 2017 for the 36-hour race in Toulouse.

The challenges facing researcher­s in the race will be so many steps forward in novel fields in chemistry and physics. In the process, each team will build up new skills, data, and know-how that will one day contribute to the developmen­t of surface chemistry (which enables chemical synthesis directly on a particular surface), or in the new science of surfaces known as membrane science, which makes it possible to deposit a moleculema­chine on the surface of a cell, or to control the movement of a single molecule in a liquid.

The CEMES-CNRS microscope is the only one in the world allowing four different experiment­ers to work on the same surface. The developmen­t of such multi-tip microscope­s will enable synchroniz­ing a great number of molecule-machines in order to increase capacity, for instance for storing energy or capturing it from a hot metallic surface. A genuine “atom technology” is dawning.

Those who would like to attend the race in Toulouse on April 28-29 will have a chance to meet the teams and visit the control room where the pilots maneuver the nanocars. However the white room housing the CEMES's four-tip microscope will be entirely closed off, so as not to disturb the race.

The rules of the race: The racecourse: 20 nm + one 45° turn + 30 nm + one 45° turn + 20 nm, for a total of 100 nm; 36 hours maximum duration; authorizat­ion to change one's nanocar in case of an accident; pushing one's nanocar is forbidden; one sector of the gold surface per team; maximum 6 hours to clean one's portion of the course before starting; no tip changes allowed during the 36 hours.

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