Archive for the ‘Chemistry n Chemical Engg.’ Category.

Closest Look Ever At Graphene

Closest Look Ever At Graphene

Hailed as the world’s most powerful transmission electron microscope, TEAM 0.5 is living up to expectations. Using TEAM 0.5 (TEAM stands for Transmission Electron Aberration-corrected Microscope), researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have produced stunning images of individual carbon atoms in graphene, the two-dimensional crystalline form of carbon that is highly prized by the electronics industry. These first time ever images were recorded at Berkeley Lab’s National Center for Electron Microscopy (NCEM), a DOE national user facility that is a premier center for electron microscopy and microcharacterization. TEAM 0.5, its newest instrument, is capable of producing images with half-angstrom resolution, which is less than the diameter of a single hydrogen atom. “Simply put, TEAM 0.5 is the best transmission electron microscope in the world, representing a quantum leap forward in instrumentation,” said physicist Alex Zettl who led this research. “Having the ability to see, basically in real time, each and every individual atom in a sample is unbelievably useful and the images we can now see have been jaw-dropping for even the most seasoned electron microscopists. TEAM 0.5 is pushing transmission electron microscopy to a new level.” Zettl holds joint appointments with Berkeley Lab’s Materials Sciences Division (MSD) and the Physics Department at the University of California’s Berkeley campus, where he is the director of the Center of Integrated Nanomechanical Systems. Collaborating with him on this graphene imaging project were Jannik Meyer, also with Berkeley Lab’s Materials Sciences Division, and Christian Kisielowski, Rolf Erni and Marta Rossell of NCEM. Their results were published in the journal Nanoletters, in a paper entitled: “Direct imaging of lattice atoms and topological defects in graphene membranes.” The properties of solid materials stem from the arrangement of their constituent atoms in the solid’s crystal structure. While technologies such as electron and x-ray crystallography can reveal the atomic geometry of a crystal, they do not identify the precise location and position of each individual atom. When the dimensions of a material shrink to the nanoscale, the location and position of each individual atom becomes critically important, as Zettl explains. “Think of the steel re-bars on a three-dimensional structure, like a jungle gym,” he said. “If a small piece of re-bar is rusted out somewhere in the center of the gym, it won’t likely have much affect on the overall properties of the structure. In a two-dimensional structure, however, a rusted out segment becomes a much bigger problem, and in a one-dimensional structure, i.e., a single re-bar, a rusted out segment can be catastrophic, causing the entire structure to fail.

On a nanoscale crystal, one missing atom or some other defect in the arrangement can result in catastrophic failure.” Graphene is especially sensitive to defects in its atomic structure. Consisting of a single-layered sheet of carbon atoms arranged in hexagons, like a sheet of chicken wire with an atom at each nexus, graphene features extraordinary electrical, mechanical and thermal properties that could enable it to serve in a broad array of carbon-based electronic devices. For the enormous promises of graphene to be fulfilled, however, scientists need a much better understanding of how specific types of defects in the crystal structure, including those that change location over time, affect its properties.

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Nanophotonics is moving out of the computational simulations and taking over the labs

Nanophotonics is living up to the hype. The study of light on the nanoscale might have been a ‘buzzword’ within optics circles a couple of years ago, but this tiny science is now moving away from the world of theoretical science and new research facilities are popping up in laboratories around the world.

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And, with it, nanophotonics brings a myriad of new nano-prefixed buzzwords, including nanocapacitors, nanoforests, nanorice and nanoshells. But the real buzz is around the applications that using light as a tool on the submicron scale could open up.

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Evidence Of ‘Rain-making’ Bacteria Discovered In Atmosphere And Snow

Brent Christner, LSU professor of biological sciences, in partnership with colleagues in Montana and France, recently found evidence that rain-making bacteria are widely distributed in the atmosphere. These biological particles could factor heavily into the precipitation cycle, affecting climate, agricultural productivity and even global warming. Christner and his colleagues published their results on Feb 29 in the journal Science.

Brent Christner, LSU assistant professor of biolo-Bacteria Causes ainfall - Christener

gical sciences, collecting precipitation samples in Antarctica. (Credit: Brent Christner Continue reading ‘Evidence Of ‘Rain-making’ Bacteria Discovered In Atmosphere And Snow’ »

Carbon nanoribbons could make smaller, speedier computer chips

A schematic of graphene nanoribbon field-effect transistor with palladium contacts (SD) on a 10 nm thick insulating silicon dioxide surface (purple). Beneath the Si02 layer is a highly conductive silicon layer (G). Credit: Stanford University

A schematic of graphene nanoribbon field-effect transistor with palladium contacts (S,D) on a 10 nm thick insulating silicon dioxide surface (purple). Beneath the Si02 layer is a highly conductive silicon layer (G). Credit: Stanford University.

Stanford chemists have developed a new way to make transistors out of carbon nanoribbons. The devices could someday be integrated into high-performance computer chips to increase their speed and generate less heat, which can damage today’s silicon-based chips when transistors are packed together tightly.

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Ceramic Bearings – Replacing Steel Bearings with Alumina Bearings

Ceramic Bearings – Replacing Steel Bearings with Alumina Bearings in Circulator Pumps by Morgan Technical Ceramics

Background

With an annual production of approximately 10 million products a year and manufacturing operations in 12 countries Grundfos is one of the most recognised and respected pump manufacturers in the world. Dedicated to making its products as reliable and durable as possible, Grundfos works with partners, education institutions and suppliers to research and develop the best pump technology for its products. One of the longest relationships of this kind is with Morgan Advanced Ceramics, which supplies the manufacturer with bearings, shafts and washers for its circulator pumps.

Case Study – Ceramic Bearings for Circulator Pumps

Circulator pumps are used in central and district heating systems and domestic service systems. They need to be able to run quietly and consistently for long operational periods - often up to 5,000 hours a year. As part of its on-going work to improve its products, Grundfos realised that the traditional steel-shaft carbon bearings used in the pump were having a direct impact on the pump’s longevity and noise.

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Ceramic - Boron nitride

Background

Boron nitride is a synthetic material, which although discovered in the early 19th century was not developed as a commercial material until the latter half of the 20th century. Boron and nitrogen are neighbours of carbon in the periodic table - in combination boron and nitrogen have the same number of outer shell electrons - the atomic radii of boron and nitrogen are similar to that of carbon. It is not surprising therefore that boron nitride and carbon exhibit similarity in their crystal structure.

In the same way that carbon exists as graphite and diamond, boron nitride can be synthesised in hexagonal and cubic forms.

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Smart - Greenhouse Research Partnership Unveiled

Cleveland Botanical Garden and Kent State University’s Liquid Crystal Institute today officially launched a pioneering research project to explore the potential of liquid crystal technology for creating more sustainable, energy-efficient greenhouses.

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At an event held on Wade Oval, the Garden and the University unveiled the two greenhouses that will be used in the first phase of the project. One contains liquid crystal panels and the other, a control, has plain glass. A demonstration revealed how the panes “switch” to manage the amount of sunlight that enters the greenhouse.

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A new catalyst developed by Hitachi Maxell Ltd

A new catalyst developed by Hitachi Maxell Ltd. can generate about 4.8 times the oxygen-reduction current per unit area than existing platinum catalysts. The new catalyst, for use at the cathode of a polymer electrolyte fuel cell (PEFC), is a gold-platinum particle 2 to 3 nm in size. Platinum is a common catalyst for the oxygen-reduction reaction in PEFCs, but it is an extremely expensive precious metal, so reducing material cost for PEFCs by minimizing the amount of platinum used, while improving its catalytic effect is an important R&D topic.

Besides reducing particle size to increase surface area, the addition of base metals such as iron, cobalt, and nickel to platinum also improves the oxygen-reduction reaction rate. But these metals dissolve easily in the acidic environment of a PEFC where the catalyst is working, which is a problem. Maxell’s new catalyst is resistant to acidic environments.
It was difficult to synthesize gold particles smaller than 5 nm due to its relatively low melting point. However, a proprietary nano-level particle-synthesizing technology, allowed Maxell to develop a high-activity structure in which the gold and platinum are not fully alloyed in the new catalyst. Using citric acid as a reducing agent, the gold-platinum catalyst particles were synthesized at 373°K. Maxell intends to continue nano-technology R&D towards practical applications in polymer-electrolyte and direct-methanol fuel cells.

Switchable nanovalves pH-sensitive pseudorotaxane as reversible gate for drug nanotransporter

We encounter valves every day, whether in the water faucet, the carburetor in our car, or our bicycle tire tube. Valves are also present in the world of nanotechno. A team of researchers headed by J. Fraser Stoddart and Jeffrey I. Zink at the University of California, Los Angeles, has now developed a new nanovalve. In the journal Angewandte Chemie, the scientists reveal what is special about it: In contrast to prior versions, which only function in organic solvents, this valve operates in an aqueous environment and under physiological conditions—prerequisites for any application as a gate for nanoscopic drug-transport agents, which need to set their cargo free at the right place and time.In order for pharmaceuticals to affect only the target diseased organ, suitable nanopackaging is required to bring the drug to the target area and release it only there. One example of a good nanoscopic packaging agent is a tiny sphere of porous silica. Its pores can be filled with the drug and closed with tiny controllable valves.

The scientists attached stem-shaped molecules onto the surface of the porous spheres and filled the pores with guest molecules. At neutral to acidic pH values, they stacked cucurbituril molecules onto these “stems”. Cucurbituril is a fat, ring-shaped molecule reminiscent of a pumpkin that has both ends hollowed out. The resulting supramolecular structure, which resembles a skewered pumpkin and is known to chemists as a pseudorotaxane, blocks the pores, so that the guest molecules cannot exit. The nanovalve is closed.

If the pH value is raised into the basic range, however, the interaction between the “pumpkins” and the “skewers” is weakened, and the pumpkins come off, opening the pores. Now the valves are open and the guest molecules can exit.

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Tiny buckyballs squeeze hydrogen like giant Jupiter

Carbon cages can hold super-dense volumes of nearly metallic hydrogen. Hydrogen could be a clean, abundant energy source, but it’s difficult to store in bulk.

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In new research, materials scientists at Rice University have made the surprising discovery that tiny carbon capsules called buckyballs are so strong they can hold volumes of hydrogen nearly as dense as those at the center of Jupiter.

The research appears on the March 2008 cover of the American Chemical Society’s journal Nano Letters.

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