Library/PT 155/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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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

Find the option that, if true, would make it materially easier or more feasible to use peptides to build commercial nanocircuits — specifically, look for an answer that reduces the number or variety of distinct peptide–semiconductor binders required.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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22.

Which one of the following, if true, lends the most support to a prediction of an eventual commercial application of Belcher and Hu's research into peptides and semiconductors?

Correct Answer
B
B is correct. The passage identifies a major practical hurdle: researchers would need to "identify many additional organic compounds that bind to circuit-component materials." If almost any semiconductor used in a circuit can be substituted by many others, then the same set of peptide binders could be reused across components, so far fewer distinct peptide–semiconductor pairs would be required and commercial application becomes more feasible. Supporting passage quotes: "Hu says that in order to use such a method to assemble a set of circuit-building tools it would be necessary to identify many additional organic compounds that bind to circuit-component materials." Also, the passage notes progress but an ongoing challenge: "As they have expanded their targets to 20 more semiconductor materials, their cache of crystal-manipulating peptides has ballooned into the hundreds." Substitutability therefore directly reduces the burden Hu describes and so lends strong support to an eventual commercial application.
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