Tightly packed molecules lend unexpected strength to nanothin sheet of
material
Chicago, Ill. (July 22, 2007) Scientists at the University of Chicago and
Argonne National Laboratory have discovered the surprising strength of a sheet
of nanoparticles that measures just 50 atoms in thickness.
"It's an amazing little marvel," said Heinrich Jaeger, professor
in physics at the University
of Chicago. "This is not a very fragile layer,
but rather a robust, resilient membrane."
Even when suspended over a tiny hole and poked with an ultrafine tip, the
membrane boasts the equivalent strength of an ultrathin sheet of plexiglass
that maintains its structural integrity at relatively high temperatures.
"When we first realized that they can be suspended freely in air, it truly
surprised all of us," said Xiao-Min Lin, a physicist at Argonne's Center
for Nanoscale Materials.
The characteristics of the nanoparticles are described in the July 22 issue
of the journal Nature
Materials in a paper written by Jaeger and Lin, along
with Klara Mueggenburg, a graduate student in physics at the University of
Chicago, and Rodney Goldsmith, an undergraduate student at Xavier
University in New Orleans, who participated as part of the National Science
Foundation's Research Experience for Undergraduates program. The work was funded
by the NSF-supported Materials Science and Engineering Center at the University
of Chicago. Additional support came from the U.S. Department of Energy.
The material's characteristics make it a promising candidate for use as a
highly sensitive pressure sensor in precision technological applications. "If
we use different types of nanoparticles to make the same kind of suspended
membrane, we can even imagine using these devices as chemical filters to promote
catalytic reactions on a very small length scale," Lin said.
As artificial atoms, the nanoparticles might also serve as building blocks
in assembling specially designed nano-objects. "This is the ultimate limit
of such a solid. It's just one layer," Jaeger said. "What is interesting is
that already one layer is so resilient and has these interesting properties."
But the payoff is scientific as well as technological. Scientists had already
discovered that the electronic properties of semiconductor material can change
dramatically when its tiniest metallic components are tightly packed between
organic molecules, a phenomenon called nano-confinement. "But now we find that
mechanical properties can also change dramatically. On a basic science level,
that's why this is exciting," Jaeger said.
The experimental material consisted of gold particles separated by organic "bumpers" to
keep them from coming into direct contact. The research team suspended this
array of nanoparticles in a solution, then spread the solution across a small
chip of silicon, a popular semiconductor material. When the solution dried,
it left behind a blanket of nanoparticles that drape themselves over holes
in the chip, each hole measuring hundreds of nanoparticles in diameter. Then
the researchers probed the strength of the freely suspended nanoparticle layer
by poking it with the tip of an atomic force microscope.
Plexiglass draws its strength from the nature of its polymers, long chains
of molecules that become entangled with one another. But the short-chain polymers
the research group used to link the nanoparticles were scarcely long enough
to qualify as polymers at all.
"They probably do not have the chance to entangle like a ‘card-carrying' polymer
would do," Jaeger said. "The molecules are anchored to the gold particles,
but only on one end. The strength comes from compressing them between the gold
particles."
The research team also found that the material held together when heated until
reaching temperatures of 210 degrees and higher.
While the Chicago-Argonne experiments focused on two-dimensional sheets, they
generally agree with computer simulations on similar three-dimensional assemblies
of smaller nanoparticles conducted by Uzi Landman's team at the Georgia
Institute of Technology.
"The behavior of these systems is sensitive to dimensionality, and this is
a subject that should be explored in the future," said Landman, the Fuller
Callaway Chair in Computational Materials Science at the Georgia Institute
of Technology. "This actually brings another control parameter into question.
Change the dimensionality, you change the properties."
About Argonne National Laboratory
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.
About University of Chicago
Founded by oil magnate John D. Rockefeller, the University of Chicago is a
private, nondenominational, coeducational institution of higher learning. Scientists
at the university are working at the cutting edge of virtually every field
of science, from cosmological astrophysics to molecular genetics and from high-energy
particle physics to psychoneuroimmunology. Seventy-nine recipients of the Nobel
Prize have been researchers, students or faculty members at the university
at some point in their careers. Web site: www.uchicago.edu.
For more information, please contact Sylvia Carson (630/252-5510 or scarson@anl.gov )
at Argonne or Steve Koppes ( 773/702-8366 or skoppes@uchicago.edu)
at the University of Chicago.
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