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A big project
studying the characteristics of the very small will provide insight
into new materials with unprecedented properties. These small systems
can be only a few atoms wide and are measured in billionths of meters,
or nanometers.
Argonne researchers
are designing the Center for Nanoscale
Materials (CNM) as one of five nanoscale science research centers
proposed nationally by the Department
of Energy. Additionally, the laboratory has joined research
forces with the University of
Chicago in a nanoscience consortium, and more generally with
a number of universities and industries in Illinois and elsewhere.
At the nanoscale,
the properties of materials change and the disciplines of chemistry,
biology, physics, materials science and engineering intersect. The
center will bring together experts from all these fields. Nanoscience
research could lead to quantum advances in such areas as magnetics,
laser technology and molecular electronics. Argonne scientists have
been working in this new and growing field since its birth.
Shedding
light on nanomaterials
The brilliant X-ray beams of the Advanced
Photon Source will provide valuable
insight into the basic workings of nanomaterials.
Central to the
CNM is a hard X-ray nanoprobe beamline at the APS that will be dedicated
to nanomaterials research.
The nanoprobean
X-ray “microscope”will permit scientists to determine
elemental composition, chemical and magnetic states, and atomic
arrangements using advanced diffraction, spectroscopy and imaging
techniques at nanometer dimensions.
“This
instrument will give us superb images of the nanostructures being
produced in the CNM fabrication facilities, allowing researchers
to observe the way they form,” said materials scientist Brian
Stephenson, director of the nanoprobe beamline project.
The hard X-ray
nanoprobe will have a resolution of 30 nanometers (about 1/2,000
the diameter of a human hair) and will have the highest spatial
resolution of any hard X-ray facility in the world.
DOE approved
an Argonne proposal in May 2002 for CNM instrumentation and has
added funding for the center and the nanoprobe to the department’s
fiscal year 2003 budget request.
CNM’s
building, which will abut APS to the west, is being funded by the
State of Illinois. The initial
$2 million covers architectural and engineering design. An additional
$34 million is expected in the next two years and will pay for construction.
The two-story, 100,000-square-foot structure will include clean
rooms, laboratories for chemical synthesis and physical characterization,
offices and meeting rooms.
The Argonne-University
of Chicago Consortium for Nanoscience Research is “a major
collaboration allowing the institutions to cross-pollinate their
research efforts more efficiently,” said CNM director Sam
Bader.
The consortium
is one of the largest University of Chicago-Argonne collaborations
ever funded. It is administered jointly and has as its co-directors
Murray Gibson, Argonne’s associate laboratory director for
the Advanced Photon Source, and Heinrich Jaeger, professor of physics
and director of the Materials
Research Science and Engineering Center at the university. Its
initial $1 million is supporting research in four nanoscience subfields.
These are:
Quantum
materials:
Scientists are working to tailor quantum-mechanical interactions
to create advanced materials with unique electronic, magnetic or
optical responses. At such small sizes, material properties change
from exhibiting classical to quantum behaviors. Scientists from
a variety of disciplines will map these properties as they trace
the evolution of a material from the microscopic to the macroscopic,
from nanometer-sized building blocks to the collective response
of two- and three-dimensional arrays.
Bio-nano
composite structures:
How useful are DNA, protein molecules and organic polymers in guiding
the assembly of complex composite structures containing multiple
nanoscale particulate domains arranged in controlled nano-architectures?
The domains could include metal, oxide or photonic nano-clusters,
or carbon nanotubes with critical sensory capabilities. Researchers
seek to develop general design principles and synthetic routes for
novel applications to enhance nanomaterials design.
Adaptive
nanoscale self-assembly:
This project seeks to transform the art of nanoscale fabrication
into a well-honed science. An interdisciplinary team works to combine,
confine and spatially organize nanoscale materials to create new
materials with unique properties and applications, especially in
the emerging field of magnetic electronics, or “spintronics.”
Scientists plan to merge chemical and lithographic fabrication approaches
and refine an emerging science of template-assisted self-assembly.
Nanophotonics:
Determining the science of light propagation in nanoscale structures
could lead to tiny optical components once considered impossible.
Combining such components to produce all-optical integrated circuits
would revolutionize technology. Also, understanding interactions
that induce cooperative behavior between nanoparticles could rewrite
more than 130 years of optical theory. The goal is to transcend
conventional diffraction-limited optics and usher in an era of controlling
light on a scale that is less than its wavelength.
For more information,
please contact Rich Greb.
Next: Nanofluids?
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