NANO-CONTACT PRINTING:
BRIDGING NANO-LITHOGRAPHY WITH INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION

Francesco Stellacci
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Nano-devices are the wave of the future, but creating them remains
an extremely slow process. This project seeks to develop a new method
called nano-contact printing,
or NCP. If successful, it will enable the quick reproduction of
a
large number of nano-patterns and nano-devices.
While it would enable the inexpensive production of a large number
of nano-devices in a short amount of time, NCP also could be used
to produce extremely complex nano-devices. Examples of such devices
include DNA sensors, protein analyzers, micro- and nano-fluidics
channels, single-electron transistors, optical biosensors, and metallic
wires.
With prior Deshpande Center support, this project showed that
the printing method works and that all of the predicted advantages
are
in place. The goal of the current phase is to spin out a new venture
based on NCP. The first target market will be the gene chip array
market, where NCP could be 10 times more cost-effective than existing
technologies.
|