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kissing
I came across this while on Google. biggrin.gif


QUOTE
The World’s Smallest Fountain Pen

By Bjorn Carey
LiveScience Staff Writer
posted: 06 October 2005
08:38 am ET



Researchers have created the world's smallest fountain pen with a tip so tiny it can draw lines a hundred times thinner than a red blood cell.

Called the "nanonfountain probe," it can paint lines as thin as 40 nanometers and has its own reservoir to hold various types of inks, including pigments for painting patterns and organic materials for designing sensors.

Existing nano-pens use the same type of inks, but cannot hold an ink supply and must be dipped into the ink.

The new pen can be attached to the atomic-force microscope, which allows scientists to see nanoscale environments as well as draw on them. Possible uses for such a tiny pen, or an array of several of them, include crafting miniscule protein arrays and complex semiconductors.

Because scientists built the pen using standard microfabrication techniques and materials, it will be possible to mass-produce the tips.

The pen was developed by researchers at the National Science Foundation Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for Integrated Nanopatterning and Detection Technologies. The research was published earlier this year in the journal Small and was publicly announced this week.

This scanning electron micrograph shows the new nanofountain-probe dispensing tip. Credit: 2005 Horacio D. Espinosa

Two images drawn with the nanofountain probe. The line widths on the letter "N" are as thin as 40 nanometers, and the swatches in the right-side image are less than 10 microns long. The inset on the right-side image shows pattern detail. Credit: 2005 Horacio D. Espinosa


source: http://www.livescience.com/technology/0510...allest_pen.html
amh210
Two in Right Oblique, please tongue.gif
krz
I hope those come with a new pair of reading glasses! blink.gif
sonia_simone
Ha, Andy!
Slush99
Whoa... blink.gif
Dr.Grace
The atomic force microscope they mention is itself very interesting. The probe is actually a little like a nanoscale phonograph needle. It doesn't actually contact the surface of the specimen, but the force exerted by the atoms in the sample move the tip when it is ultra-close to the probe (that's why it's called an "atomic force" microscope.) The probe is moved in a zigzag pattern over the specimen, scanning over it little by little. The probe moves up and down following the surface contours of the specimen.
amh210
QUOTE (Dr.Grace @ Jun 12 2006, 12:12 PM)
The atomic force microscope they mention is itself very interesting. The probe is actually a little like a nanoscale phonograph needle. It doesn't actually contact the surface of the specimen, but the force exerted by the atoms in the sample move the tip when it is ultra-close to the probe (that's why it's called an "atomic force" microscope.) The probe is moved in a zigzag pattern over the specimen, scanning over it little by little. The probe moves up and down following the surface contours of the specimen.

I understand this to mean that the nib is quite flexible but not suited for an italic hand.

Andy
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