The chemist at Tavers has developed the world\'s smallest electric motor made of a single molecule, a development that could create a new class of equipment with applications ranging from medicine to engineering. In this new study, the team at taftz reported an electric motor with a size of only 1 nm considering that the current world record is 200 nm motor. One human hair is about 60,000 nanometers wide. \"Significant progress has been made in the construction of molecular motors driven by light and chemical reactions, but this is the first time that electricity- Although there are some theoretical suggestions, the molecular motor driven has been proved . \"Charles H. Sykes, Ph. D. Associate Professor of Chemistry at the University of taftz, senior author of the paper. \"We \'ve proven that you can power a single molecule to do something that\'s not just random. The study was recently published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.