As computer components grow smaller and smaller it becomes more and
more difficult to manufacture them by conventional means, meaning the
nano-hard-drives of the future are going to come at a cost. So
researchers from the University of Leeds in the UK and Tokyo University
of Agriculture and Technology are enlisting the help of magnetic
bacteria, which they say can be harnessed to build tiny computing
components similar to those found in conventional PCs, or even to
construct the biological computers of the future.
The bacterium Magnetospirilllum magneticum is a naturally
occurring microorganism that lives in underwater environs, using its
natural magnetism to swim up and down the Earth’s magnetic field lines
in search of oxygen. But when they eat iron, special proteins generate
tiny crystals of the mineral magnetite within the bacteria, imbuing them
with a tiny piece of one of the more magnetic natural materials on the
planet.
By feeding the bacteria iron and manipulating the way they colonize,
the researchers think they can essentially grow tiny magnets that could
serve as components in the minuscule hard drives of the future. Whereas
it’s very difficult to make very small magnets and shape them so that
they can serve as memory devices, these proteins and the bacteria in
which they reside can be coaxed into doing all the hard work, creating
the magnetic material and churning out regularly-shaped blocks of it.
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