Iron Man' plants are supercharged by nanotech power
The story of Iron Man in which a person gains spectacular abilities by infusing their body with technology,
is still just fantasy. But the first Iron Plants have been made. A team
of biologists and engineers has made bionic plants that have been
upgraded with an injection of nanotechnology.
The idea is two-fold: to boost plants'
ability to photosynthesise, and to produce a new class of bionic
materials that grow and repair themselves using little more than
sunlight. But the results have been received with a mixture of amazement
and scepticism, largely because the underlying mechanisms are something
of a black box.
The team say they have persuaded
nanomaterials to burrow deep into plant cells, reaching the tiny
chloroplasts that make the plant's energy. Here the nanomaterials
enhance this process, even allowing it to work outside the plant.
Applications remain far off, but could
include self-powering and self-repairing phones or even buildings; trees
that double as cellphone towers; and a new type of fuel cell. "The
vision is to use plants as a platform for technology," says team leader Michael Strano of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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