Laboratory Equipment

LABNEWS Banner

Facebook  YouTube  Twitter 

 


Site Sponser






Home > Resources > Laboratory News

Read/Post Comments

Electrical Process Simplifies Nanowires

July 22, 2010

072210_nanowire
Clumps of extremely tiny nanowires in this image are captured with the aid of an electron microscope. The clumping pattern, which occurs as a result of surface tension during the manufacturing process, limits the usefulness of the wires, which are viewed as a likely core element of more powerful microelectronics, solar cells, batteries and medical tools.

Surface tension isn’t a very powerful force, but it matters for small things—water bugs, paint, and, it turns out, nanowires.

Nanowires are so tiny that a human hair would dwarf them—some have diameters 150 billionths of a meter. Because of their small size, surface tension that occurs during the manufacturing process pulls them together, limiting their usefulness. This is a problem because the wires are seen as a potential core element of new and more powerful microelectronics, solar cells, batteries and medical tools.

But in a paper in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces now online, a Univ. of Florida engineering researcher says he has found an inexpensive solution.

Kirk Ziegler, an assistant professor of chemical engineering, says nanowires are most often made today with a process that involves the immersion of the wires.

When complete, each wire is supposed to poke up right next to the other from a flat surface, like bristles on a Lilliputian toothbrush. But Ziegler says the wires are so tiny and so flexible that surface tension clumps them up when dried.

Manufacturers use extremely high pressure to reduce the surface tension, but Ziegler says the process is difficult, expensive and not conducive to large-scale production.

Ziegler and graduate student Justin Hill realized they needed to introduce a force that counteracted that of the surface tension. They came up with a process simple enough to be achievable with a nine-volt battery. The researchers apply an electrical charge to the nanostructures during the manufacturing process, charging each tiny wire and making it repel its neighbor.

“As the two nanowires pull toward each other because of the surface tension, the like charges at the tips act to push them apart,” Ziegler says. “The aim is to get a net zero force on the structure, so the nanowires stand straight.”

Tests of microscope-slide-sized surfaces, each containing trillions of nanowires, showed that the procedure effectively prevents clumping, Ziegler says.

Nanowires have not found wide commercial applications to date, but Ziegler says that as engineers learn how to make and manipulate them, they could underpin far more efficient solar cells and batteries because they provide more surface area and better electrical properties.

“Being able to pack in a higher density of nanowires gives you a much higher surface area, so you start to generate higher energy density,” he says.

Ziegler says biomedical engineers are also interested in using the wires to help deliver drugs to individual cells, or to hinder or encourage individual cell growth. The Univ. of Florida has applied for a patent on the process, he added.

Source: Univ. of Florida


Contact Editor Print Article Email To Friend

Comments
Type Your Comment...
Name:   
E-mail (optional) *E-mail addresses do not publish to the site.
Comment:   


Editor's Corner

Tim Studt, Editor-in-Chief
Tim Studt
Editor in Chief

Statistical Sampling Could Protect Food Safety
The current recall of hundreds of millions of eggs based on a couple of hundred cases of salmonella poisoning (none fatal) reflects on the statistical sampling methods in place to protect the public’s safety.. ...continue

Application Notes
More

Most Viewed Content
Advantage Business Media © Copyright 2010 Advantage Business Media
Privacy Policy |  Terms & Conditions |  Advertise with Us