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ALIFE
2006

Self-Replication and Self-Assembly for Manufacturing

13 years 11 months ago
Self-Replication and Self-Assembly for Manufacturing
It has been argued that a central objective of nanotechnology is to make products inexpensively, and that self-replication is an effective approach to very low-cost manufacturing. The research presented here is intended to be a step towards this vision. We describe a computational simulation of nanoscale machines floating in a virtual liquid. The machines can bond together to form strands (chains) that self-replicate and self-assemble into user-specified meshes. There are four types of machines and the sequence of machine types in a strand determines the shape of the mesh they will build. A strand may be in an unfolded state, in which the bonds are straight, or in a folded state, in which the bond angles depend on the types of machines. By choosing the sequence of machine types in a strand, the user can specify a variety of polygonal shapes. A simulation typically begins with an initial unfolded seed strand in a soup of unbonded machines. The seed strand replicates by bonding with fre...
Robert Ewaschuk, Peter D. Turney
Added 10 Dec 2010
Updated 10 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2006
Where ALIFE
Authors Robert Ewaschuk, Peter D. Turney
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