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Good Things In Small Packages - Nanotechnology

 
     

Tin crystals promenade across copper, stopping now and then to trade places with a counterpart, using choreography akin to the "camphor dance" - a phenomenon first observed in 1686. The discovery of dancing tin, reported in Science's  Nanotechnology Issue, may promise surprisingly efficient nanomotors, if researchers can harness this chemical locomotion system.

By manipulating the surface energies that drive tin crystals to move across copper, it might also be possible to control such movements, thereby forcing alloys to form desired nanoshapes, according to researchers with the Sandia National Laboratories in Livermore, California. Scientists have known for centuries that free energy on liquid surfaces can stimulate movement by particles. Camphor particles were spotted dancing across water more than 300 years ago. In the 19th century, British scientist Lord Rayleigh expanded such observations to provide one of the first reliable measurements of the surface tension of water.

 Science authors Andreas K. Schmid, Norm C. Bartelt and Robert Q. Hwang
of Sandia have shown that tin behaves in a similar fashion as it diffuses
across copper to form bronze. Within two seconds, tin deposited onto copper
at room temperature converges to form two-dimensional crystalline clusters or
"islands," the Sandia researchers said. These tin islands zip along the
copper surface, picking up copper atoms in exchange for tin atoms left in
their wake.

 Kidnapped copper atoms are then ejected from the tin islands,
having morphed into 2-D bronze crystals. After a few moments, the copper
surface is covered by the smaller bunches of bronze and the tin islands
dissolve. This "completely unanticipated cooperative process" occurs because
roving tin is repelled by tin already embedded within the copper, researchers
said. When the dancing tin encounters no competition for a particular surface
slot, however, it quickly dumps an atom and grabs copper.

 Thus, Schmid reported, tin islands "lower the surface free energy by moving toward unalloyed regions of the surface." In other words, tin islands are efficient:
Once they have ruled out a surface area as occupied by other tin, they keep
moving. The crystalline clumps will sometimes even paint themselves into a
corner to avoid covering the same ground twice, researchers found. Schmid's
research "can be viewed as a direct observation of a nanomotor," according to
a Science Perspectives essay. Tin islands convert chemical energy into
forward motion, thereby overcoming the friction between tin and the copper
surface, explained Flemming Besenbacher of Denmark's University of Aarhus and Jens K. Noskov of the Technical University of Denmark. How powerful are these natural nanomotors? Tin islands crank out roughly 0.3 horsepower per kilogram of weight, Besenbacher and Noskov estimated.

 By comparison, a car's power-to-weight ratio is about 0.1 hp/kg--making the natural nanomotors more efficient, in theory. "The challenge," they concluded, "is to devise nanomotors whose motion can be controlled externally (so that they can be used to move things around at will) and that can be refueled." To watch
bronze-formation in real-time, the Sandia researchers, sponsored by the U.S.
Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, used two modern
imaging technologies: Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and low-energy
electron microscopy (LEEM).

 The LEEM process let the researchers "see" objects on the copper surface and follow tin's rapid movements in real-time, based on the diffraction of electrons. Complementing this information, a topographical map of the material's surface was generated using high-sensitivity STM. In this process, a fine-tipped probe delivers electrical current to the mounted sample. Any Protuberance causes a current surge, as the tip's sudden proximity to the surface prompts electrons to
"tunnel" through the sample. Tin atoms left by the crystalline islands were
revealed as bumps in the image. Science's Nanotechnology Issue also includes
the following research reports:

 MICROSCOPIC MACHINES: Tiny helicopters--powered by biomolecular motors and complete with rotating nanopropellers--may suggest self-propelled machines for delivering medicine to specific regions inside the human body, Cornell University researchers reported. Invisible without a microscope but mighty enough to muster eight propeller rotations per second, the new mini-copters combine fabricated components with biological molecules. An enzyme-based biomotor (ATPase) drives a nickel propeller when powered by the biochemical fuel, ATP (adenosine triphosphate). In nature, ATPase transforms food into an energy source for people, plants, and other living systems by breaking atomic bonds in ATP to generate ADP (adenosine diphosphate). The reaction cranks a
cylindrical, rotor-like protein inside ATPase, thereby spinning an attached
propeller. The bioengineered nanomachines may someday serve as "a pharmacy
inside a cell," perhaps even functioning in concert with the physiology of
living cells, according to Carlo D. Montemagno of Cornell.

 NANOTUBE DIODES DEBUT: By creating a simple electronic device from a carbon tube just two nanometers in diameter, Stanford University researchers have set the stage for wire devices small enough to work inside molecules. Chongwu Zhou, Hongjie Dai and colleagues demonstrated a method for "doping" or chemically modifying the properties of nanotubes to make them serve as junctions between semiconductors, capable of electrical signal manipulation. The researchers covered half of a single-walled carbon nanotube with a plastic-type material, polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA). Subjecting the uncovered region to a dose of potassium atoms then triggered an electron transfer, which left the exposed area with a negative potential. Thus, a carbon nanotube was transformed into a p-n (positive-negative) junction device.

 EARNING THEIR STRIPES: Fundamental studies of fabricated patterns similar to fingerprints or zebra stripes, reported by researchers with Princeton University, may provide new information to support high-density information storage and laser technologies. More immediately, the study by Christopher Harrison and
colleagues promises a better understanding of what happens during copolymer
lithography, a technique for creating highly intricate patterns. Copolymer
lithography may prove especially useful for developing nanoscale
semi conducting devices from, say, certain liquid crystals, but
defect-formation events slow the process. Using time-lapse atomic force
microscopy while annealing synthetic fingerprints, Harrison's team
investigated defects called disclinations. They found that groups of
disclinations (three or four) could come together and annihilate themselves,
suggesting that it may be possible to minimize defects and speed up
patterning processes.

 KONDO-IN-A-BOX: Many well-known effects in solid-state
physics are being revisited in nanoenvironments. One example of this trend is
the Kondo Effect, named for Jun Kondo, who realized in 1964 that magnetic
impurities slow electron movement through metals--even at low temperatures.
Such slowing could find use in device switching, especially in single-walled
carbon nanotubes (SWNTs). Harvard University researchers reported that
magnetic cobalt clusters on SWNTs literally throw electrons for a loop,
increasing resistivity. Conductivity can be enhanced by lengthening the
tubes, which seems to give electrons more space to recover, Teri W. Odom,
Charles Lieber and colleagues reported. Shorter tubes, on the other hand,
exhibited discrete states characteristic of the quantum mechanics for
"particle-in-a-box" scenarios, which in this case would be the nanotube. In
addition to these research reports, Science's Nanotechnology Issue includes a
special section containing three Reviews, a News article and five News
laboratory profiles, addressing the latest in nanotechnology and the
attention (both positive and negative) that the field has received in the
last decade. The Review articles provide a glimpse of the future for tiny
electronics, labs-on-chips, and microrobots, and the challenges inherent in
building and moving machinery at this miniature scale. News coverage examines
nanotechnology's rise from science fiction to reality, and the recent
breakthroughs in the field that have brought nanotechnology to the attention
of policymakers, funding agencies and naysayers who believe the technology
itself is dangerous.

Technology news items reprinted with permission from www.sciencemag.org. For copies of any of these articles, call (202) 326-6440, or send e-mail to scipak@aaas.org.

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