|    Cornell University researchers already  have been able to detect the mass of a single cell using submicroscopic  devices. Now they're zeroing in on viruses. And the scale of their work is  becoming so indescribably small that they have moved beyond the prefixes  "nano" "pico" and "femto" to "atto."  And just in sight is "zepto."   Members of the Cornell research group  headed by engineering professor Harold Craighead report they have used tiny  oscillating cantilevers to detect masses as small as 6 attograms by noting  the change an added mass produces in the frequency of vibration.   Their submicroscopic devices, whose size  is measured in nanometers (the width of three silicon atoms), are called  nanoelectromechanical systems, or NEMS. But the masses they measure are now  down to attograms. The mass of a small virus, for example, is about 10  attograms. An attogram is one-thousandth of a femtogram, which is  one-thousandth of a picogram, which is one-thousandth of a nanogram, which is  a billionth of a gram.   The work is an extension of earlier  experiments that detected masses in the femtogram range, including a single  E. coli bacterium, which recorded a mass of about 665 femtograms. For the  latest experiments, the sensitivity of the measurement was increased by  reducing the size of the NEMS cantilevers and enclosing them in a vacuum.  Eventually, the researchers say, the technology could be used to detect and  identify microorganisms and biological molecules.   The latest experiment by Craighead and  graduate research assistant Rob Ilic is reported in the latest (April 1),  issue of the Journal of Applied Physics.   The researchers manufactured the tiny  cantilevers out of silicon and silicon nitride. Imagine a diving board 4  micrometers long and 500 nanometers wide. Just as a diving board will vibrate  if you jump on it, these tiny cantilevers can be set into motion by an  applied electric field, or by hitting them with a laser. The frequency of  vibration can be measured by shining a laser light on the device and  observing changing reflection of the light. The technology is similar to that  used last year in playing the newest version of the Cornell nanoguitar, built  to demonstrate the potential of nanofabrication.   The frequency of vibration of an object  is, among other things, a function of mass: A heavy guitar string vibrates  more slowly than a light one and produces a lower tone. These tiny  cantilevers vibrate at radio frequencies, in the 1 to 15 megahertz range, and  because they are so small to begin with, adding just a tiny bit more mass  will make a measurable change in frequency.    For cell detection, the researchers  coated their cantilevers with antibodies that bind to E. coli bacteria, then  bathed the devices in a solution containing the cells. Some of the cells were  bound to the surface, and the additional mass changed the frequency of  vibration. In one case just one cell happened to bond to a cantilever, and it  was possible to detect the mass of the single cell.   Antibodies also have been used to bind  virus particles or proteins to a cantilever, the researchers say, but for the  experiment reported in the Journal of Applied Physics, they attached tiny  gold dots as small as 50 nanometers in diameter to the ends of the  cantilevers. The dots then were exposed to a sulphur-based organic chemical  that naturally binds to gold, which formed a single layer of a few hundred  molecules on the surfaces of the dots. From the frequency shift that resulted,  the researchers calculated that the mass added to a typical 50-nanometer gold  dot was 6.3 attograms.   After testing various cantilever lengths  and another type of oscillator suspended between two points, they calculated  that the minimum resolvable mass would be .37 of an attogram. They said that  with refinements, the devices could be extended to the zeptogram range, or  one one-thousandth of an attogram. The sensitivity is such that the devices  could be used to detect and identify DNA molecules, proteins and other  biological molecules by coating the cantilevers with appropriate antibodies  or other materials that would bind to the targets. Ilic already reports that  "we have done viruses," although that achievement is not reported  in the current paper.    |