Nanomaterials break out of laboratory into marketplace
ARGONNE, Ill. (Oct. 1, 2004) — Miniature medical machines that can bring sight to
the blind and computers
that work at the speed of light are no longer the stuff of futuristic novels.
Argonne National Laboratory researchers are creating nanomaterials and nanotechnology
to make these and other innovations possible, and collaborating with industry
to bring new technologies to the marketplace.
Nanomaterials have been under study at Argonne since the 1980s. Built from
the bottom up with particles just a few atoms across and measured in the billionths
of a meter, these materials exhibit unique electronic, magnetic, structural,
chemical and optical properties. Accordingly, nanoscience and nanotechnology
are among the hottest areas of research internationally and are potentially
a trillion dollar industry.
Nanotechnology is expected to open new possibilities in areas as diverse as
superconductivity, computer memory media, electrical and thermal transmission,
micro-switching devices and highly sensitive free-radical detectors.
“Argonne is a natural research center for nanoscience,” said Center for Nanoscale
Materials Director Eric Isaacs. The laboratory's strong materials sciences
program provides decades of expertise in producing these materials.
The traditional distinctions among scientific disciplines blur at the nanoscale,
and Argonne's multidisciplinary staff excels in developing cross-disciplinary
approaches to problem-solving. Biologists, chemists, physicists, materials
scientists and other researchers collaborate on basic research. Later, they
collaborate with industry to combine market needs and innovative science, and
transfer research results to the marketplace.
Argonne has partnered with many large and small companies interested in nanomaterials.
Some companies are formed expressly to license laboratory technology. Nanophase
Technologies Corp. is an early example of Argonne's work with industry. The
publicly traded company was founded in the 1980s to commercialize an Argonne
technology for making materials from particles less than 50 nanometers in diameter.
Nanophase's challenge was to commercialize the nanomaterials synthesis process
by bringing production volume up and cost down. Initially, materials production
was measured in grams per day and cost thousands of dollars per gram. Now,
production is measured in tons, and the cost is low enough that the company's
materials are used in personal products, textile fibers, fuel cells and abrasion-resistant
coatings.
Advanced Diamond
Technologies is the latest company developed to license Argonne-developed
nanomaterials technology. The company licensed the rights to Argonne's ultrananocrystalline
diamond (UNCD) patents and is developing protective UNCD coatings for several
applications, including mechanical shaft seals used in many industries. Reducing
friction with UNCD coatings can help devices last longer and run cooler.
The company is using UNCD as a substrate for building Micro-Electro-Mechanical
Systems (MEMS) – systems-on-a-chip technology that integrates mechanical elements,
sensors, actuators and electronics on a common substrate – and for biomedical
implants and biosensors.
Argonne research with industry
Argonne's UNCD films may help to restore sight to the millions of people
who have degenerative retinal disease. The UNCD film hermetically seals a silicon
microchip implanted in the eye's corrosive environment. Researchers are working
with Second Sight Medical
Products, Inc., and six other research organizations
to refine a device to replace the eye's destroyed rods and cones as light receptors
and optical signal converters.
Argonne scientists developed a patented method to suspend copper nanoparticles
in water and ethylene glycol. The resulting heat-transfer fluids conduct heat
more efficiently than conventional coolants because the suspended
nanoscale particles have a higher percentage of their atoms near their surfaces,
improving the fluid's ability to absorb and transfer heat. The particles' small
mass does not damage heat exchange surfaces. Argonne is working with NEI Corp.,
Nuvonyx, Inc., and the
Korean Electric Power Research Institute to refine this technology for practical
use.
Argonne chemists have developed a technique to join
nanoparticles of the metal oxide titanium dioxide with DNA to produce novel
bio-inorganic hybrids. These coated semiconductor nanoparticles can be programmed
to seek out a specific cell type, attach to the cell surface and carry out
spatially confined chemistry. Researchers performed early work in this area
sponsored by DOE's Basic
Energy Sciences, Chemical Sciences program. They are
now developing this technology to carry out photodynamic therapy with a company
that has a Small Business Innovation Research grant funded by the National
Institutes of Health.
Applications could range from biomolecular semiconductors for energy conversion
in photosynthesis, photodynamic medical therapy, biosensors, nanomachines,
cell manipulators and molecular scissors.
Other nanotechnology research
A system to clean porous structures such as brick and concrete contaminated
by radioactive materials uses engineered nanoparticles combined with a super
absorbent gel similar to that found in a baby diaper. In the event of a terrorist
attack with a “dirty bomb” or other radioactive dispersal devices, the system
would allow porous structures that trap radioactive materials to be cleaned
instead of demolished. The method was demonstrated in May 2004 for the Department
of Homeland Security. These researchers are also developing this technology
for biomedical and military applications.
Nanomagnetism combines materials in novel ways to produce nanoscale magnetic
storage systems. One such technology under study at Argonne, spintronics,
can help revolutionize computing capabilities by providing denser, more reliable
data storage enabling faster computer startups and more energy-efficient systems.
Microscopic-sized optical circuits and switches may flow out of chemical research
to understand the unusual optical properties of metal nanoparticles. Metal
nanoparticles can concentrate large amounts of light energy at their surfaces
and may be key to one day replacing electrons in computers with the faster-moving
photons that give off less heat and friction.
Research facilities
Argonne's nanoscience research has a new home in the Center
for Nanoscale Materials (CNM), a Department of Energy research and user facility sited at
the laboratory to foster collaboration between academia, industry and other
government laboratories.
“Argonne is an ideal site for the CNM,” Isaacs said, “because this is the
only place in the country where you can find hard X-rays at the Advanced
Photon Source (APS), neutrons at the Intense
Pulsed Neutron Source and an Electron
Microscopy Center— three powerful and complementary tools for nanoresearch
in one laboratory.” These facilities are open to academic, government and industrial
users through a peer-reviewed process.
A new building to house the Center for Nanoscale Materials is under construction.
It will provide research instruments, laboratories, clean rooms and work space
to assist in fabricating and understanding these tiny materials.
CNM's first dedicated instrument will be the pioneering nanoprobe beam line
under construction at the APS, this hemisphere's most brilliant source of X-rays
for research. The nanoprobe will be a hard X-ray microscopy beamline with the
highest spatial resolution in the world. With its combination of fluorescence,
diffraction and transmission imaging at a spatial resolution of 30 nanometers
or better in a single tool, the nanoprobe will be able to penetrate samples in
situ and provide information about their internal structures.
An electron-beam lithography facility will provide fabrication support to
CNM users, including a 100-kilovolt electron-beam lithography device – one
of a handful of such devices in the country. The center will also feature an
Argonne-developed nanopositioning system for precision motion and measurement.
Argonne's CNM research examines the behavior and fundamental properties of
nanomaterials with a special emphasis on:
- Theory and simulation
- Nanoprobe
- Nanomagnetism
- Bio-inorganic interface
- Nanocarbon
- Complex oxides
- Nanophotonics.
Partnering with Argonne
As a national laboratory, much of Argonne's research focuses on science and
technology with potential applications. When the long-term ideas come closer
to marketable technology, Argonne shares its work with industry, government
and other organizations through technology transfer agreements including:
- Reimbursable research and development
- Cost-shared research and development
- Technical services
- Licensing
- Nondisclosure agreements
- Personnel exchanges
- Access to Argonne's scientific and technical facilities.
— Evelyn Brown
Argonne National Laboratory seeks solutions to pressing national problems in science and technology.
The nation's first national laboratory, Argonne conducts leading-edge basic
and applied scientific research in virtually every scientific discipline. Argonne
researchers work closely with researchers from hundreds of companies, universities,
and federal, state and municipal agencies to help them solve their specific
problems, advance America 's scientific leadership and prepare the nation for
a better future. With employees from more than 60 nations, Argonne is managed
by UChicago
Argonne, LLC for
the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office
of Science.
For more information, please
contact Steve McGregor (630/252-5580 or media@anl.gov)
at Argonne.
|