Title: Nanostructures - PNPA
1Nanostructures - PNPA
2Overview
- PNPA rubric
- Nanomaterials engineering
- Nanostructures / ontology
- Process development / optimization
- Integrative (PNPA) approach
3PNPA Rubric
4PNPA Rubric
Properties (P)
Structure property relationships gt
Fabrication property relationships gt
lt Properties determination
(N) Nanostructure
Fabrication property relationships gt
lt Nanostructure elucidation
lt Process tools / QA/QC monitoring
Processing (P)
Characterization
PLOs Program Learning Outcomes Integrated
Materials Engineering Process
5Nanostructures
- Nanocarbon
- Thin Films
- Silicon structures
- Quantum dots
- Nanoparticles
- Polymers
- Composites
- Metals and alloys
- Glasses
- Ceramics
6Nanostructures Map
7Nanofabrication Map
8Nanocarbon
- Diamond
- Diamond Like Carbon (DLC)
- Fullerenes
- Carbon nanotubes
- (SWNT, MWNT)
- Graphene
- Carbon nanospheres
9Allotropes of Carbon
- Eight allotropes of carbon a) Diamond, b)
Graphite, c) Lonsdaleite, d) C60
(Buckminsterfullerene or buckyball), e) C540, f)
C70, g) Amorphous carbon, and h) single-walled
carbon nanotube or buckytube
10Diamond Like Carbon
- Tribology applications
- CDV deposition
- Magnetic media (outer film)
- Combination of sp2 and sp3 carbon
- Raman and XRD characterization
11Diamond Like Coatings are composed of carbon,
which to a great extent possess the same
structures as diamond (sp3-configured carbon, see
fig. 2) and therefore are extremely hard.
Diamond-Like carbon film
- A Swiss industrial company developed ultra hard
coatings (ta-C DLC) as protection against
abrasion and contamination of surfaces.
Advantages are hardness of gt5000HV, low friction
coefficient of 0.1, low process temperature of
lt100C, control of coating thickness down to a
few nanometers. The company is looking for
industrial partners (e.g. medical, watch,
electronic field) to market these advantages for
new opportunities, e.g. for surface hardening,
protection against wear, solid lubrication.
http//www.enterprise-europe-network.ec.europa.eu/
src/matching/templates/completerec.cfm?bbs_id1632
50
12Carbon Nanotubes
- Graphene winding
- sp2 hybridized
- CVD, carbon arc
- Electrical conductivity, mechanical strength
- Applications in electronics
13Graphene
- A novel nanostructure
- 1-5 layers of graphite
- Can be oxidized/functionalized
- Applications in electronics
- Multiple means of preparation
- Multiple characterization tools
14Graphene Nanostructure
Extended sp2 hybridized carbon and p-p network
15Nanospheres
- Nanospheres are a novel form of carbon prepared
from acetylene, or annealing of other forms of
precursor carbon - These materials can be blended as composites
with mechanical properties - Process tools include CVD/furnace
- Characterization tools include Raman
- Maximize sp2 bonds / graphitic nano-onion
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18Thin Films
- Thin films are a family of approaches to
nanomaterials development, integral to entire
industries - Evaporation, sputtering, plasma, CVD (family)
- Process tools focus on building layer or stacks
of precisely controlled thickness/composition - Characterization tools include surface, optical,
X-ray, and other composition/structural tools
19Thin Film Solar on Kapton
20Thin Film Engineering
Left image Predicted efficiency versus bandgap
for thin-film photovoltaic materials for solar
spectra in space (AM0) and on the surface of the
Earth (AM1.5) at 300 K. Right image
Decomposition of single-source precursor to
produce CuInS2
http//www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/RT/RT1999/5000/5410hep
p.html
21Silicon Nanostructures
- Semiconductor properties
- Electronic, micro electromechanical applications
(MEMS) and sensors - Tunable bandgaps (lasers, LEDs, transistors,
photovoltaic materials) - Lithography and selective etch/deposition
- MEMS and functional silicon nanostructures
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23Quantum Dots
- Confined quantum electronic states
- Chemically prepared, and can be grafted to
biomolecules used as biomolecular tags - Biosensor applications
- Process tools include chemical synthesis
- Characterization tools include a variety of
chemical analysis coupled with electronic testing.
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25Nanoparticles
- Can be carbon, ceramic, metal, etc
- Used as a filler in composite materials
- Used in energy storage (batteries)
- Biomimetic can be used in nanomedicine
- Fabrication from a variety of methods
- Characterization using SEM, AES/XPS, and
microbeam FTIR/Raman etc
26Nanoparticles on Surfaces
27Nanoparticles on Surfaces
- A group led by Jillian Buriak has found a rapid
and cost-effective method of forming tiny
particles of high-purity metals on the surface of
advanced semiconductor materials such as gallium
arsenide. While the economic benefits alone of
such a discovery would be good news to chip
manufacturers, who face the problem of connecting
increasingly tiny computer chips with macro-sized
components, the group has taken their research a
step further. The scientists also have learned
how to use these nanoparticles as a bridge to
connect the chips with organic molecules.
Biosensors based on this development could lead
to advances in the war on terrorism. - "We have found a way to connect the interior of a
computer with the biological world," said Buriak,
associate professor of chemistry in Purdue's
School of Science. "It is possible that this
discovery will enable chips similar to those
found in computers to detect biohazards such as
bacteria, nerve gas or other chemical agents."
http//www.purdue.edu/uns/html4ever/021211.Buriak.
nanoparticle.html
28Nanoparticles
- In nanotechnology, a particle is defined as a
small object that behaves as a whole unit in
terms of its transport and properties. - It is further classified according to size in
terms of diameter, fine particles cover a range
between 100 and 2500 nanometers, while ultrafine
particles, on the other hand, are sized between 1
and 100 nanometers. - Similar to ultrafine particles, nanoparticles are
sized between 1 and 100 nanometers. Nanoparticles
may or may not exhibit size-related properties
that differ significantly from those observed in
fine particles or bulk materials. - Although the size of most molecules would fit
into the above outline, individual molecules are
usually not referred to as nanoparticles.
http//www.news-medical.net/health/Nanoparticles-W
hat-are-Nanoparticles.aspx
29Nanostructured Polymers
- Extended monomer chains
- Chemical and morphological blending in matrix
materials - Block copolymers can be synthesized with a
nanostructured dimension or form - Nanopolymers are high performance materials
used in plastics applications - Characterization gt organic analysis tools
30Composites
- Particles, fibers, and novel nanostructures
(nanospheres) blended/bonded in a matrix - Usually adds mechanical strength
- Can add electrostatic properties
- Polymer blending process tools
- Organic analysis (FTIR, Raman, XRD, SEM) and
mechanical / strength testing
31Self Assembled Composite Material
- This electron micrograph shows a self-assembled
composite in which nanoparticles of lead sulfide
have arranged themselves in a hexagonal grid.
(Credit Image courtesy of DOE/Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory)
http//www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/10/09102
2164245.htm
32Metals and Alloys
- Metals and alloys use a combination of blending
and grain boundary engineering to achieve novel
structure gt properties - Nanostructured metals/alloys have applications as
structural materials, and especially aerospace /
automobiles - Powder metallurgy, sintering, plasma spray
- Characterize gt SEM, TEM, AES, XRD, XRF
33Nanometal Structures
Nanotechnology.blogspot.com
http//www.plasmachem.com/nanometals.html
34Glasses
- Nanostructured glasses have areas that are glass
and areas that are interfacial (this is
controlled by the overall composition). - Heat treating nanoglasses expands the interfacial
region exponentially with temperature. - Nanoglasses are characterized with FE-SEM, small
angle XRD, and optical tools
35Car Glass Sealant
http//www.mountaintradinghouse.com/?page_id728
36Ceramics
- Ceramic materials optimize nanofabrication
largely through grain boundary engineering. - Synthesis is through powder metallurgy
- Ceramics have high temperature, wear resistance,
and novel magnetic applications - Characterized using FE-SEM, XRF, XRD
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38Nanochemistry
- Dendrimers
- SAMs (Self Assembled Monolayers)
- Supramolecular chemistry
- Molecular Organic Materials (MOM)
- Metal Organic Framework (MOF)
- Fabricate Synthetic Organic
- Characterize GC/MS, HPLC, FTIR, NMR
39Self Assembled Monolayers
http//nimet.ufl.edu/nanomed.asp
40Bionanostructures
- Liposomes, polymers, nanoemulsions,
- Synthetic proteins / synthetic amino acids
- Synthesis gt molecular / biotechnology
- Applications gt nanomedicine, biofuels
- Characterize gt HPLC, NMR
41Bionanostructures
nanoBRICKspro synthetic smart nanomaterials
from nano to macro
42Nanomedicine
- Caption A Lodamin nanoparticle with TNP-470 (the
drug's active ingredient) at the core, protected
by two short polymers (PEG and PLA) that allow
TNP-470 to be absorbed intact when taken orally.
Once the nanoparticles (known as polymeric
micelles) reach the tumor, they react with water
and break down, slowly releasing the drug.
Lodamin appears to retain TNP-470's potency and
broad spectrum of anti-angiogenic activity, but
with no detectable neurotoxicity and greatly
enhanced oral availability.Credit Kristin
Johnson, Vascular Biology Program, Children's
Hospital Boston. Usage Restrictions Please
credit as indicated.
http//nanotechnologytoday.blogspot.com/2008_07_01
_archive.html
43Supramolecular Structures
- Complex organic structures
- Complex synthetic mechanisms
- Host-guest chemistry / directed self assembly
(complex solution chemistry) - Applications in catalysis, nanomedicine, and
green chemistry - Characterize gt NMR, FTIR, GC/MS, HPLC
44Supramolecular Structures
- Supramolecular chemistry refers to the area of
chemistry beyond the molecules and focuses on the
chemical systems made up of a discrete number of
assembled molecular subunits or components. The
forces responsible for the spatial organization
may vary from weak (intermolecular forces,
electrostatic or hydrogen bonding) to strong
(covalent bonding), provided that the degree of
electronic coupling between the molecular
component remains small with respect to relevant
energy parameters of the component.78 While
traditional chemistry focuses on the covalent
bond, supramolecular chemistry examines the
weaker and reversible noncovalent interactions
between molecules.
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supramolecular_chemis
try
45Supramolecular chemistry Fluorine makes a
difference Donald A. TomaliaNature Materials 2,
711 - 712 (2003)doi10.1038/nmat1004
- From top to bottom, specific chemical structures
lead to spatial conformations, to self-assembly
and finally to self-organization into
supramolecular architectures. The basic dendron
molecule used by Percec et al.2 is shown in the
middle. On the left, the non-fluorinated dendron
with a conical shape leads to spherical
assemblies that self-organize in a cubic lattice.
On the right, the crown-like shape of the partly
fluorinated dendron gives rise to columnar
assemblies that self-organize in a hexagonal
liquid-crystalline lattice.
46PNPA Integrative Approach
47Summary
- Key nanostructures, novel properties
- PNPA rubric gt integrated nanomaterials
engineering, by integrating - fabrication gt structure gt properties with
characterize gt structure gt properties
48References
- ObservatoryNANO
- Science Daily
- Wikipedia
- Nanobricks
- MEMSnet