The world of electric motors is about to get a little bit smaller � no, make that a lot smaller. A team of researchers  at Tufts University have successfully created an electric motor that�s  made out of only one molecule. Its total size? About one nanometer. This  advance isn�t the first single-molecule motor, but it�s the first to be  electric powered, and that gives it some advantages that other motors,  which are either driven by chemicals or light. The use of electricity  allows for more precise control and a broader range of applications.
As described in their paper in Nature Nanotechnology,  here�s how it works: the researchers used a butyl methyl sulfide  molecule as their �motor.� As you can see in the figure on the left, the  sulfur atom is in yellow, and the remainder of the molecule is composed  of a chain of four carbons to the right, and one to the left. The  molecule rests on a copper surface, and it�s powered by an electron from  a scanning tunneling electron microscope. The electron is fired at the  sulfur atom, causing it to spin.
That doesn�t sound like much right now, but the team hopes to be able  to create interlocking molecular chains, so that when just one molecule  is powered, it will turn others. That will enable some interesting  uses, particularly the manipulation of fluids through small channels for  medical applications. If successful, there may be some  nanotechnological applications as well.

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