nano 2007-09-05 09:27
Two Nanostructures Are Better Than On
[size=5][b]Two Nanostructures Are Better Than On[/b][/size]Dc
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[b]【纳米科技世界快讯】Imagine using minuscule structures the size of molecules to harvest sunlight and convert it into electricity. Or employing the same structures to store hydrogen fuel so that it fits into a car’s gas tank. Or replacing today’s semiconductors with these structures, ushering in the next generation of small, powerful electronics.[/b] \,N)S/e\ v
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[i]TEM image shows multiwalled carbon nanotubes coated with silver nanocrystals. Credit: Courtesy of Junhong Chen[/i] ]$t:vH1@c
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These technologies don’t exist yet, but the work of a researcher at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) is bringing them closer to reality with hybrid materials made with carbon nanotubes (CNTs).|1Vgqo,GVAoQ S
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Junhong Chen, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, is pioneering better methods of making CNTs more predictable.1H0I~4Y]9Y~3X
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CNTs are invisibly thin sheets of graphite that are rolled into a cylindrical shape. Chen’s laboratory focuses on new uses for CNTs combined with nanoparticles, bits of matter that are nanoscale in all three dimensions.
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“These interesting multi-component structures will open up new opportunities in several interdisciplinary fields,” Chen says, “including medical diagnostics, green energy technology, and sensors for everything from food flavor to invisible toxic gas.”
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[b]Big and small worlds collide[/b]|)J2WO7O#th-nn
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CNTs are the potential superstar structures of molecular engineering because of their remarkable electronic and mechanical properties. Already they are used in making flat panel display screens and sensing devices that can detect substances in very low concentrations.YH2G
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They conduct electricity like either copper or silicon, are stronger than steel, pliable like polymers (kinds of plastics) and can be made from a range of raw materials.
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The challenge is to coax them to behave in predictable ways.#\:\~zX*Fg
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With the help of graduate student Ganhua Lu, Chen has devised a method for creating hybrid structures by coating CNTs with aerosol nanoparticles. His lab also has produced a low-cost way to make “custom” nanoparticles that gives them full control over the structure’s final properties.&Qs4`d FB,q
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Manipulating CNTs and nanoparticles is tricky business because so many conditions affect their behavior. Just below nanoscale, at the level of individual atoms, matter acts quite differently than it does lumped together in bulk.
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Already they have devised a gas sensor using only nanoparticles of tin oxide.iK
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Their process for producing hybrid structures is far superior to the method currently available, and their work advances understanding of how materials in the quantum world interact with those in the “seen” world.7PF3N8Lc
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[b]Surface science cluster at UWM[/b]%^3F2D#r0{z5O%e
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“My goal is to make something real, that people can see and use and that has tangible results,” says Chen, who came to UWM in 2003 after a year as a post-doctoral scholar at the California Institute of Technology.
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With two patents pending and funding from sources such as the National Science Foundation and the Xerox Corporation, he is well on his way.
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Chen is one of a cluster of UWM scientists – in engineering, chemistry and physics – who conduct research into nano- and surface science. In fact, UWM’s Laboratory for Surface Studies, a University of Wisconsin System Center of Excellence, brings together the work of 13 faculty who explore the structure and properties of solid surfaces and the interaction of surfaces with atoms and molecules.
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The lab’s research encompasses topics such as thin films and laminates, spintronics, molecular wires, optical fiber sensing, and properties such as catalysis, corrosion and friction.
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