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A biological semiconductor?

 
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May15-12, 07:33 AM   #1
 

A biological semiconductor?


Right, so I'm a freshman in college right now, so if I'm wrong, I'm wrong.

Would it be possible to get a biological system to imitate or act like a semiconductor or nanoelectronic device or is that a fantasy? Does anyone here have experience doing it? Or perhaps use nanoelectronics to solve biological problems by integrating them with the human body on a cellular level?

Who knows, I might end up doing my Phd thesis on this!(just a joke...)
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May15-12, 08:05 AM   #2
 
Before semiconductors can be made the first step is to reproduce the transistor. The below links should help:

http://www.kurzweilai.net/bacteria-p...cal-transistor

http://blogs.ucdavis.edu/egghead/200...istor-created/
May15-12, 08:12 AM   #3
 
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There are organic light-emitting diodes.
May16-12, 05:57 PM   #4
 

A biological semiconductor?


Biological systems can imitate passive analog audio circuits (or vice versa). In the case of insect binaural directional hearing, both the cricket and certain flies have internal structures to convert a binaural amplitude disparity to a constant amplitude phase difference.
Jun23-12, 12:24 AM   #5
 
Wow, haven't looked at this for a while, forgot about it. Sorry for reproducing an old discussion, but I'll check these out. I've also found a couple of a papers on the subject, trying to learn more.

I'm guessing this is a multidisciplinary line of research, but what sort of courses would be useful in order to get into a field doing this?

For anyone interested, here is a good one I found. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal...l/468516a.html
Jun23-12, 08:04 PM   #6
 
GNRtau,

Would it be possible to get a biological system to imitate or act like a semiconductor or nanoelectronic device or is that a fantasy?
Those are two disparate subjects. To consider your first question, do you know what a semiconductor is? Why do you think a biological semiconductor would be better than a inorganic one? If it cannot do what a silicon semiconductor can do, why consider it?

In what way are you thinking of a "biological semiconductor" acting or imitating a inorganic one. Silicon semiconductors do a lot of things. What do you think biologicals can do that silicon can't?

For anyone interested, here is a good one I found. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal...l/468516a.html
Is $18.00 that they want for a copy interesting enough?

Ratch
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