new fiber optical cable

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  • Andrew Pratt
    Moderator Emeritus
    • Aug 2000
    • 16507

    new fiber optical cable

    Thought Jon and Bing might find this interesting...

    "Glassy sponge from ocean floor proves better than man-made fibre optic cable

    By WILLIAM MCCALL



    (AP) - Scientists say they have identified an ocean sponge living in the darkness of the deep sea that grows thin glass fibres capable of transmitting light better than industrial fibre optic cables used for telecommunication.

    The natural glass fibres also are much more flexible than manufactured fibre optic cable that can crack if bent too far. "You can actually tie a knot in these natural biological fibres and they will not break - it's really quite amazing," said Joanna Aizenberg, who led the research at Bell Laboratories.

    The glassy sponge, nicknamed the "Venus flower basket," grows the flexible fibres at cold temperatures using natural materials, a process materials scientists hope to duplicate in order to avoid the problems created by current fibre optic manufacturing methods that require high temperatures and produce relatively brittle cable.

    The sponge also is able to add traces of sodium to the fibres which increase their ability to conduct light, something that cannot be done to glass fibres at the high temperatures needed for commercial manufacturing, Aizenberg said.

    "One of the challenges of technology is doping the glass structure with additives that improve optical properties," she said. "If we understand exactly how we can deposit sodium in glass fibres at low temperatures as nature does, we can control all the properties."

    The sponge grows in deep water in the tropics. It is about 45 centimetres tall with an intricate silica mesh skeleton that also serves as a home for shrimp. The glass fibres form a crown at its base that appear to help anchor the sponge to the ocean floor. The fibres are about five to 18 centimetres long and each is about the thickness of a human hair.

    The study, which appears Thursday in the journal Nature, details one of the latest discoveries in the emerging field of biomimetics: the effort to understand how biological systems are engineered and apply the principles to technology.

    "It's such a wonderful example of how exquisite nature is as a designer and builder of complex systems," said Geri Richmond, a chemist and materials scientist at the University of Oregon who was not involved in the study.

    "We can draw it on paper and think about engineering it but we're in the stone age compared to nature," she said.

    Biomimetics has driven a form of "bioprospecting" in the ocean, said Randy Kochevar, a marine biologist at the Monterey Aquarium in California.

    "Folks involved in industry or medicine or biotechnology go out and look for compounds of interest in the deep sea, and it's so novel and so untapped there is a great deal of interest," Kochevar said.

    Discoveries in recent years include an enzyme that improves laundry detergent, taken from bacteria that breaks down fats in cold water; a glowing protein from jellyfish that allows surgeons to illuminate cancerous tissue while they operate to remove it; and another enzyme that improves DNA testing, drawn from bacteria that live near hydrothermal vents at the ocean bottom.

    Kochevar said the sponge study follows an earlier discovery by Aizenberg that a starfish called the brittlestar is coated with tiny lenses that act as a collective "eye," offering engineers a model for creating sensors and guidance systems. Both discoveries show how valuable life in the ocean can be to society and how much of the ocean remains to be explored, he said.

    "It's incredible, really. We're looking at these things that are not known to be visual animals yet we're finding these fascinating optical properties that are built into their bodies," Kochevar said. "




  • Lex
    Moderator Emeritus
    • Apr 2001
    • 27461

    #2
    funny, I put that in off topic, even though in a way, it is on topic.

    Lex
    Doug
    "I'm out there Jerry, and I'm loving every minute of it!" - Kramer

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    • David Meek
      Moderator Emeritus
      • Aug 2000
      • 8938

      #3
      Yeah, but Lex you're gonna need to buy a SCUBA rig and a boat to capitalize on this.




      David - HTGuide flunky
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      Our DVDs on DVD Tracker

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      David - Trigger-happy HTGuide Admin

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