{33 r PTCDR'WeCn&E The Next ■ Thing Mark Sims is with a three-dimensional model of a molecule. DIANA LIEBERMAN Special to the Jewish News lia ark Sims is a bit of a vision- ary on the subject of nan- otechnology, the so-far impossible task of manufacturing really, really, really small things. How small? The basic unit of measurement for nanotechnology is the nanometer, a par- ticle totaling a billionth of a meter. "If you were a nanometer tall, it would take 32 years of walking, without ever sleep- ing, to walk a meter," Sims says. A human hair is about 20,000 nanometers thick. Nanotechnology is the next huge wave of scientific exploration, with the potential to revolutionize life in this gen- eration, says Sims, a Bloomfield Township resident with his wife, Elaine Fieldman, and their 14-year-old daugh- ter. Sims serves on the executive board of the Birmingham Temple. With his new company, known as Nanorex, he is poised to ride the nan- otechnology wave from its very begin- nings. Sims, 41, began Nanorex just over a year ago. The Bloomfield Hills-based company creates computer software designed to speed the process of nano- design and analysis. The company has seven employees: three in Michigan, two in San Francisco, one in New York and one in Pennsylvania. "What we are developing is engineer- ing programs to allow someone to design and analyze nanotech devices so they can see if these devices will work," Sims says. "You don't want to go off and spend millions of dollars to develop a product and then find the flaws in the design. "Right now, scientists and researchers can use our models and say, Wow! It would be cool if we could build this."' The possibilities for mechanical objects on the nano-scale are breathtak- ing, Sims says, comparing the potential to the plastics revolution of the 1960s. "In our lifetime, we will see the first real application in molecular engineering," he says. "Basic everyday products will be made out of other materials, not just plastics. "Diamonds have a three-dimensional structure that lends itself to building something. Instead of laying down links, we'll be laying down carbon atoms. I expect to see consumer uses — for example, wine glasses made of dia- monds." Other uses include self-regulating computers that can swim through blood to the brain to relieve memory loss and nano-sized cleansers that would change the molecular structure of polluted air. It's the stuff of science fiction and, so far, no one has actually built any of these things. But, when they do, they'll need corn- puter modeling to prove the objects work in real-life situations. And Nanorex provides those computer mod- els. Damian Allis, a post-doctoral researcher in computational chemistry at Syracuse University, came to Sims' work A Bloomfield Hills-based company is poised for the nanotechnology revolution. through his research as a theoretical drug designer, investigating chemical applications of nanotechnology. "Mark's work will find a far greater use than even he realizes," Allis says. "This software is broad enough for chemical uses as well as mechanical ones." Business Model Nanorex is the second company Sims has founded. In 1992, he founded Netrex, using his designs to provide or enhance computer security for medium to large businesses. After becoming the largest alarm com- pany on the Internet, Sims sold the business in 1999 to Internet Security Systems. Born in Indiana, Sims moved to Ann Arbor at age 11 while his mother attended the University of Michigan. He later attended Community High School for two years, then moved back to Indiana with his mother. In 1981, the future inventor/business- man began his studies at Eastern Michigan University. He earned a bach- elor's degree at EMU in computer-aided design in 1986. He also completed the owners and presidents management pro- gram at Harvard University, a highly competitive three-year curriculum. "Nanorex is not your typical business model, because there's no market in the traditional sense," Sims says. "We're focusing on a very small set of users." For this reason, the company is not using traditional marketing strategies. "Instead, we are contacting thought leaders in this select group of researchers into nanotechnology," Sims says. "It's a tight network of leaders telling us how our software works and suggested fea- tures we can add. As the field grows, the new people are going to seek out advice from these leaders who will recommend us. "In universities, we are talking with professors to encourage the use of our software as a teaching aid. Right now, nanotechnology engineering is just in a textbook. With our stuff, people can actually design multi-dimensional mod- els." There's no guarantee that scientists will ever be able to manufacture nano- sized gears, pulleys, recharging batteries and the like. But it's extremely likely, Allis says. "The field is brand new — we're just laying the groundwork," he says. "Everything we know tells us these things should be possible. If everybody stopped and put money into it, like they did for the space program, it would be another decade or, at the most, two." Allis says the field of nanotechnology is "not just a small group of crazy head- space people. A real lot of ugly research is being done. Mark is absolutely on the right track. I'd stake my degree on it." Meanwhile, Sims is having the time of his life. "I love what I'm doing," he says. 'Associating with these incredible scien- tists is amazing. "I feel sometimes like I'm in the mid- dle of a science fiction story." 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