4.6 Article

Making things by self-assembly

Journal

MRS BULLETIN
Volume 30, Issue 10, Pages 736-742

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1557/mrs2005.208

Keywords

biomimetic materials; electronic materials; mesoscale; microfabrication; optical materials; self-assembly; surface chemistry; templating

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Self-assembly-the spontaneous generation of order in systems of components-is ubiquitous in chemistry, in biology, it generates much of the functionality of the living cell. Self-assembly is relatively unused in microfabrication, although it offers opportunities to simplify processes, lower costs, develop new processes, use components too small to be manipulated robotically integrate components made using incompatible technologies, and generate structures in three dimensions and on curved surfaces. The major limitations to the self-assembly of micrometer- to millimeter-sized components (mesoscale self-assembly) do not seem to be intrinsic, but rather operational self-assembly can, in fact, be reliable and insensitive to small process variations, but fabricating the small, complex, functional components that future applications may require will necessitate the development of new methodologies. Proof-of-concepts experiments in mesoscale self-assembly demonstrate that this technique poses fascinating scientific and technical challenges and offers the potential to provide access to hard-to-fabricate structures.

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