Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Chemistry and Nanomaterials Carl C. Wamser Portland State University Nanomaterials Course - June 27, 2006 Carl C. Wamser Portland State University Nanomaterials Course - June 27, 2006
2
Nanoscale = billionths (10 -9 ) 6 billion people 8000 mile diameter 10 billion components 8 inch diameter
3
Effects of Nanoscale Structural differences: Bulk Carbon Nanoscale Carbon Carbon Nanotubes Sumio Iijima - 1991 C 60 (Buckeyball) Smalley, Curl, Kroto 1996 Nobel Prize GraphiteDiamond
4
Instrumentation / Imaging “Quantum Corral” 48 Fe atoms positioned by the STM used to image them http://www.nano.gov/html/facts/home_facts.html
5
Dimensional Issues
6
Chemistry Issues Structure / Dynamics / Synthesis Structure-Function Correlations Self-Assembled Systems Applications: – Materials – Biological – Environmental
7
Organic LEDs Structure-Function Correlations (emission wavelengths)
8
Quantum Effects Fluorescence of cadmium selenide nanoparticles 4 nm 2 nm Band gap depends on particle size (number of atoms in the particle)
9
Chemical Bonding Forces used to assemble structure: –Ionic –Metallic –Covalent –H-bonding –Metal-ligand –Van der Waals –π-π stacking
10
Ionic Bonding Molecular beaker epitaxy Layer-by-layer growth of polyelectrolytes Tom Mallouk Penn State U http://www.mapr.ucl.ac.be/~jonas/Home_page_AJ/Research/ESA/ESA.html
11
Ionic / Electrostatic Effects A molecular elevator Responsive to acid/base J. D. Badjic, et al., Accts. Chem. Res., in press. J.F. Stoddart, UCLA
12
Ionic / Electrostatic Effects Conformational Molecular Rectifiers, A. Troisi and M. A. Ratner, Nano Lett., 4(4), 591-595 (2004).
13
Metallic Bonding melting point: 1337 °K melting point: 650 °K Gold StatueGold nanoparticles Nanoscale gold has different properties than bulk gold, including: appearance, solubility, and melting point. thiol stabilized gold nanoparticle gold nanoparticles (2 nm) in solution Jim Hutchison, U. Oregon http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~hutchlab
14
Covalent Bonding - Carbon Single-walled carbon nanotubes: armchair - metallic zigzag - semiconducting chiral - semiconducting multi-walled - metallic
15
Covalent Bonding - Carbon Carbon nanotubes coated with diamond nanocrystals M. L. Terranova, et al., Chem. Mater., 17(12) pp 3214 - 3220
16
Hydrogen Bonding DNA Double Helix http://www.haveland.com/ graphics/dna-3d.jpg
17
π-π Stacking - Liquid Crystals
18
Charge-Trapping Memory Device Liu, C-Y.; Bard, A.J.; Acc. Chem. Res. (1999), 32, 235-234.
19
Self-Assembled Monolayer Monolayer of DDB on graphite (didodecylbenzene) http://www.nanoscience.com/education/gallery/DDB_ani.htm 10 nm
20
Van der Waals Interactions SAMMS Self-Assembled Monolayers on Mesoporous Supports Glen Fryxell, PNNL http://samms.pnl.gov/
22
Polyporphyrin Interfacial Film (thin)
23
Polyporphyrin Interfacial Film (thick)
24
Photosynthetic Reaction Center http://www.mpibp-frankfurt.mpg.de/~michael.hutter/rcenter.html ( 1988 Nobel Prize )
25
Resources Nanochemistry references and websites: Handbook of Nanotechnology, B. Bhushan, ed. (2004) Molecular Nanotechnology, D. E. Newton, ed. (2002) Integrated Chemical Systems, A. J. Bard (1994) Engines of Creation, K. Eric Drexler (1986) ( http://www.foresight.org/EOC/ ) “There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom”, Richard Feynman (1959) ( http://www.zyvex.com/nanotech/feynman.html ) National Nanotechnology Initiative ( http://www.nano.gov/ ) Nano Letters - ACS Journal ( http://pubs.acs.org/journals/nalefd/ ) Materials Today - British journal ( http://www.materialstoday.com )
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.