nano 2008-04-26 07:34
模拟计算解释了为什么纳米粒子会”钉扎”于石墨烯表面
[b][box=Magenta]Simulations may explain nanoparticles 'pinned' to graphene[/box][/b]
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[box=Lime]【纳米科技世界快讯】It was hard to understand how a graphene sheet — a featureless, flat sheet of carbon atoms — lying on an equally featureless iridium surface, somehow converted itself into a kind of muffin tin that formed “muffins” made from newly arrived iridium atoms. The muffins were equally spaced and of equal size.[/box]
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[color=DarkSlateGray]Graphene has proven a difficult material for researchers to tame. Peter Feibelman 's computational simulation suggests an explanation for why iridium atoms (colored green) nest regularly atop a base of graphene (dark-colored atoms) grown over an iridium substrate. Peter’s image of the orderly nanoscopic metallic arrangement may provide insights to other scientists. His paper on the work was published last Thursday in Physical Review B online. (Photo by Randy Montoya)[/color]
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Graphene flakes are notoriously difficult to work with. Still, they are stronger than diamond, better heat-shedders and conductors than silicon, and thought to have great potential in the worlds of microelectronics and sensors. If only they could be tamed.H.@U1k/v
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Imagining a whole new set of possible applications, people wanted to know why the orderly metallic array self-created itself.
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“At the outset,” writes Sandia researcher Peter Feibelman, who created the explanatory simulation published last week in Physical Review B, “this seemed quite a mystery.”~[%d{
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The mystery started in 2005, when a German team discovered the new wrinkle in the battle to harness graphene but had difficulty in explaining the reaction.
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A graphene flake lying atop an iridium crystal unexpectedly caused new iridium atoms, deposited atop the flake, to arrange themselves into cluster arrays, stable even as its temperature reached 400 to 500 kelvin.
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Sherlock Holmes himself, looking for clues to why the iridium quantum dots so mysteriously attached, would have found little to go on.
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The iridium support layer was flat as could be. The same was true of the graphene layer that formed on top of it, which sported neither hooks nor ports for nanoparticle docking.M9fN0R*K}"o
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Graphite itself — merely a group of sheets of graphene — is so slippery it can be used as a lubricant. Why would nanodots attach to the completed graphene layer instead of just sliding away?
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Even granted an attachment mechanism, why would newly introduced iridium atoms form a moiré — a regular, ordered array — atop the graphene instead of a planar second surface — a sandwich where the iridium was the bread and graphene the meat?