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t's their nanostructure that makes many crucial materials useful,
and chemical processes essential to everyday life routinely do their
work on the nanoscale. There's a lot more to nanoscience than building
itty-bitty widgets.
Nature's robots
For 15 years, ever since K. Eric Drexler's Engines of Creation
launched the nanocraze, the field has been plagued by sci-fi notions
of tiny robotic "molecular assemblers" running around
shoving atoms together. But as buckyball pioneer Richard Smalley
remarks, molecular assemblers have long existed: "We call them
catalysts."
Catalysts are "helper" substances that promote chemical
reactions without themselves being consumed. Nature's catalysts,
enzymes, assemble only specific end products. Industrial catalysts
are rarely so precise.
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