Scientific American Digital Home
   Advanced Search Sign In
Archive My Account Help and Support Subscribe View Cart 0 item(s) in cart

Preview


June 2006

June 2006
Scientific American Magazine

Price: $7.95


Engineering Life: Building a Fab for Biology; June 2006; Scientific American Magazine; by David Baker, George Church, Jim Collins, Drew Endy, Joseph Jacobson, Jay Keasling, Paul Modrich, Christina Smolke and Ron Weiss; 8 Page(s)

Although the term "genetic engineering" has been in use for at least three decades, and recombinant DNA methods are now mainstays of modern research, most biotechnologists' work with living things has little in common with engineering. One reason is that the tools available for building with biological "parts" have yet to reach a level of standardization and utility equal to that in other engineering fields. Another has to do with methods and mind-sets in biology, although these, too, can be powerfully influenced by technology.

Electronic engineering, for example, was transformed beginning in 1957, when Jean Hoerni of Fairchild Semiconductor, a small company in what would later be known as Silicon Valley, invented planar technology. It was a system for layering and etching metals and chemicals within silicon wafers using templates called photomasks. This new approach allowed engineers to produce integrated circuits cleanly and consistently and to create a wide variety of circuit types just by changing the pattern on the photomask. Soon engineers could draw from libraries of simple circuits made by others and combine them in increasingly complex designs with a widening range of applications.





Pay Per Issue

Pay for only the issues you want.
Search or browse, make your selections, and checkout.


Subscribe | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Site Requirements | Help | Contact Us | Institutional Site License
ScientificAmerican.com | Search | Browse | My Account | View Cart
Copyright © 1993-2009 Scientific American, Inc. All rights reserved