The motor, made from a single
molecule just a billionth of a metre across, is reported in Nature Nanotechnology.
The minuscule motor could have applications in both
nanotechnology and in medicine, where tiny amounts of work can be put to
efficient use.
Tiny rotors based on single molecules have been shown
before, but this is the first that can be individually driven by an electric
current.
"People have found before that they can make motors
driven by light or by chemical reactions, but the issue there is that you're
driving billions of them at a time - ever single motor in your beaker,"
said Charles Sykes, a chemist at Tufts University in Massachusetts, US.
"The exciting thing about the electrical one is that
we can excite and watch the motion of just one, and we can see how that thing's
behaving in real time," he told BBC News.
The tip of a scanning tunnelling microscope - a tiny
pyramid with a point just an atom or two across - was used to funnel electrical
charge into the motor, as well as to take images of the molecule as it spun.
It spins in both directions, at a rate as high as 120
revolutions per second.
But averaged over time, there is a net rotation in one
direction.
"By modifying the molecule slightly, it could be
used to generate microwave radiation or to couple into what are known as
nano-electromechanical systems," Dr. Sykes said.
"The next thing to is to get the thing to do
work that we can measure - to couple it to other molecules, lining them up next
to one another so they're like miniature cog-wheels, and then watch the
rotation propagation down the chain," he said.
As well as forming a part of the tiniest machines the
world has ever seen, such minute mechanics could be useful in medicine - for
example, in the controlled delivery of drugs to targeted locations.
But for the moment, Dr. Sykes and his team are in contact
with the Guinness Book of World Records to have their motor certified as the
smallest ever.