机械设计及其自动化毕业设计论文外文资料翻译.doc
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1、毕业设计(论文)外文资料翻译学院: 机电工程学院 专业: 机械设计及其自动化班级: 机械四班 姓名: 学号: Microscopic Machines1 The surgeon picks up a syringe and approaches the man on the operating table. The patients coronary arteries are dangerously clogged with fatty deposits, which must be removed to prevent him from suffering a heart attack. T
2、he doctor injects a cloudy solution into the vein in the mans arm. The solution contains thousands of microscopic “robot surgeons”, each equipped with a tiny motor to propel it through the bloodstream, chemical detectors for locating the life-threatening blockages, and miniature scalpels for cutting
3、 them away. Within half an hour, the swarms of tiny robots have navigated through the patients blood vessels to his heart, located the trouble spots, and sliced the lumpy, yellowish deposits off the artery walls. Normal blood flow has been restored.2 for the time being, such medical scenarios will h
4、ave to remain on the technological dream list - and they may never become reality. No one has built anything remotely like these fictional micro robots. But scientists and engineers in the United States and elsewhere have already made a variety of gears, levers, rotors, and other mechanical parts th
5、e size of specks of dust. Such components - made of the element silicon or of metals or other materials - may someday be assembled into tiny robots and various other kinds of microscopic machines designed to perform specific functions. These micro machines would be so small that dozens could easily
6、fit inside a sesame seed. 3 The recent advances in the miniaturization of machine parts represent the beginnings of a new branch of engineering, whose practitioners think small - extremely small. Micro machine technology is still so new that it doesnt yet have a widely accepted name. Some researcher
7、s call it micro engineering, while others refer to it as micro dynamics or micromechanics. Whatever they call their new discipline, these engineers work in a realm where objects are measured in fractions of a millimeter. (One millimeter is about 0.04 inch.) At that scale, a grain of sand looks like
8、a boulder and mechanical principles such as friction, wear, and lubrication take on new, poorly understood meanings. 4 Such factors may present problems that cannot be overcome. If they can be surmounted, however, micro engineering may usher in a revolutionary new machine age. We may see the creatio
9、n of all kinds of teensy devices combining electronic detectors called sensors with mechanical parts called actuators that do work. In addition to performing microscopic surgery, such micro machines might pump minute amounts of chemicals, focus laser beams in optical computers, and power tiny tools
10、whose uses can only be guessed at for now.5 A handful of relatively simple micro devices have already made it to the marketplace. Some computer printers, for example, form letters by spraying tiny amounts of ink onto the paper through microscopic nozzles developed by engineers at the International B
11、usiness Machines (IBM) Research Laboratory in San Jose, Calif. But most currently available micro devices are sensors which react to changes in their environment, for example, by bending under pressure. Engineers at the Honeywell Corporations Physical Sciences Center in Bloomington, Minn., have deve
12、loped micro sensors that measure airflow in the ventilation systems of buildings or in the instruments that hospitals use to monitor patients breathing. Other companies have developed tiny sensors for measuring pressure in automobile engines or in the human heart. 6 Meanwhile, researchers are workin
13、g on various kinds of microscopic actuators that may be perfected in the 1990s. Some of these will perhaps work like minuscule hands or tweezers for manipulating tiny objects, such as individual cells under a microscope. Miniature pumps and valves are also a possibility and would have a variety of a
14、pplications. Medical researchers envision an artificial pancreas for treating diabetes that would pump tiny amounts of insulin as needed into the blood stream.7 Micro engineering came to national attention in June 1988 when electrical engineer Richard Smaller and his colleagues at the University of
15、Californias Berkeley Sensor & Actuator Center announced that they had made a tiny silicon motor, the first electrically powered micro device containing a rotating part. The devices rotor, the part that spins, was smaller than the width of a human hair. (A human hair is about 0.05 millimeter in diame
16、ter.) The cogs of the rotor were the size of red blood cells. When the researchers used static electricity to activate electrodes surrounding the rotor, the rotor began to spin haltingly. Although the movement was crude, and the rotor later jammed, the experiment showed that engineers visions of mic
17、roscopic machines could become reality.8 The achievement at Berkeley came almost 30 years after researchers first began to think small. In1959. Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard P. Feynman predicted that scientists would someday build machines and tools as tiny as dust specks and then use them t
18、o manufacture even smaller things. Feynman had no idea how that feat would be accomplished, however, and to many ears his speculations were the widest kind of blue-sky fantasy. But with the coming of the microelectronics revolution in the computer industry in the 1970s, what had been fantasy suddenl
19、y seemed like a distinct possibility. 9 The history of the computer industry is a story of constant miniaturization, as engineers learned to cram more and more electronic components into a smaller amount of space. In the 1960s, electronics manufacturers began building complex circuits on fingernail-
20、sized pieces of silicon. By the 1970s, these tiny circuits, which had become known as microchips, contained thousands of elements. Today, a single microchip can hold millions of components.10 The production of silicon microchips begins with a procedure called microlithography, which involves several
21、 steps. First, a large, detailed drawing of the chip is made, and the drawing is photographed. The photographic image is then greatly reduced and imprinted - usually as a stencil like pattern of metallic lines - on a glass plate. The finished plate is known as a mask. Next, a palm-sized silicon wafe
22、r gets a coat of a photo resist, a plastic material that, when exposed to ultraviolet light, is chemically weakened. When the mask is placed over the coated wafer and exposed to ultraviolet light, the ultraviolet rays that are not blocked by the mask transmit the image of the chip to the wafer. The
23、regions of the photo resist that are weakened by the process are then etched, or eaten away, by solvents or gases. The etching exposes the underlying layer of silicon in a pattern that corresponds to the mask pattern. 11 Once this process has been completed, the engineers usually deposit additional
24、thin films of silicon, metal, or insulating materials onto the exposed silicon pattern and repeat the etching process several more times. In this way, they can build up extremely complicated patterns and structures on the wafer, all no more than a few thousandths of a millimeter thick. Each patterne
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