Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Computer chips are getting so small they may soon hit a physical limit, so scientists are trying to copy how living cells build tiny parts. Instead of DNA, researchers Angela Belcher and Evelyn Hu study peptides—very short chains of amino acids—to see if they can guide how the materials used in chips form crystals. They made and tested huge numbers of peptides, found some that stick only to certain chip materials and even to particular crystal surfaces, improved those peptides, and now have hundreds that work on many materials; they are also designing peptides that can glue two crystals together, which could let tiny circuits assemble themselves.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the author's central claim about the potential of peptide research to overcome the 25-nm transistor size limit; use the explicit sentences about the physical limit, natural nanoscale processes, and Belcher & Hu's peptide experiments to identify the choice that states that potential.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
Choice C correctly captures the passage's main point: that Belcher and Hu's peptide research suggests peptides might eventually be applied to produce transistors below the current lower size limit. Supporting sentences from the passage: 'The laws of physics dictate that, with current methods, properly functioning transistors ... cannot be made smaller than 25 nanometers (billionths of a meter).'; 'In living cells, however, natural chemical processes efficiently and precisely produce extremely complex structures below this size limit, so there may be hope of using some such processes to yield tiny molecules that can either function like transistors or be induced to combine with other materials in carefully controlled ways to construct whole nanocircuits.'; 'Much current research is aimed at harnessing DNA to this end, but materials chemist Angela Belcher and physicist Evelyn Hu are investigating a different molecular pattern maker: peptides...'; 'They found a few peptides that not only bound exclusively to one of the crystals in the experiment but also latched onto a particular face of the crystal.'; and 'It will take that kind of finesse at the nanoscale to produce self-assembling circuits.' These lines collectively show the passage's thesis that peptides may enable nanoscale transistor/circuit construction beyond current limits.
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