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All that glitters is not gold, goes the old adage.
But the shrinking frontiers of science require a
qualifier: Gold itself does not always glitter.
In fact, if gold is created in small enough chunks,
it turns red, blue, yellow and other colors, says Chris Kiely, who
directs the new Nanocharacterization Laboratory in Lehigh's Center for
Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology.
Kiely, a professor of materials science and
engineering, explores the properties of "nanogold," or gold particles
so tiny - containing only hundreds or even tens of atoms - that they
must be measured in nanometers. (One nm is equal to one one-billionth
of a meter.)
As is true with other materials, gold in "nano"
form exhibits different properties from bulk gold.
"As everyone knows," says Kiely, "normal bulk gold
is shiny, it is gold in color, it is inert, and it conducts
electricity.
"If, however, you shrink gold down to a
nanoparticle, its properties change dramatically. Its color changes,
it becomes a very good catalyst, and is no longer a metal - instead it
turns into a semiconductor."
Kiely seeks not only to identify the properties of
nano-materials but also to find new uses for them and new ways of
assembling them into usable structures.
Together with Martin Harmer, director of the CAMN,
Kiely takes small numbers of gold atoms, sometimes combining them with
atoms of other elements, and seeks to form them into nanoparticles of
very well defined shapes and sizes. Their research is supported by a
grant from the National Science Foundation.
Much as a child puts together Lego toys, the
researchers using Au nanoparticles as building blocks have assembled
one-, two- and three-dimensional nanostructures, including 1-D
nanowires, 2-D nanofilms and 3-D supercrystals.
Kiely and Harmer have learned that they can tailor
the properties of their nanoparticles assemblies by varying the size
and elemental composition of the particles.
By heating these nanoparticle arrays at different
rates, they can also introduce instability into the structures, since
the smaller nanoparticles have a tendency to melt first. They have
succeeded in causing a string of nanoparticles to melt into a nanowire
that is 10 times thinner than any wire made using the standard
microelectronic process called electron beam lithography.
"We have learned that the speed at which we heat
and destabilize the nanoparticles is crucial," says Kiely. "If you
want to make nanowires, you have to heat very, very quickly. If you go
too slowly, the result is a globby mess."
Kiely and Harmer, who is renowned for his work in
the sintering (heating) of ceramics, are also assembling an array of
gold nanoparticles into a non-metallic super-crystal that behaves like
a semiconductor. By altering the size and separation of the
nanoparticles that make up the supercrystal, they can control its
overall conductivity.
Kiely, Harmer and other nanotechnology researchers
at Lehigh have an advantage over their peers at other universities.
The electron microscopy facilities at Lehigh are among the best
anywhere and are ideally suited for the analysis of materials at the
nanoscale. In fact, for 34 years, each June, Lehigh has hosted the
world's most comprehensive microscopy short courses.
Recently, Lehigh's microscopy facilities received a
state-of-the-art boost. The university purchased a new JEOL
transmission electron microscope (TEM) fitted with an
aberration-correction device, along with a separate
aberration-correction device that will be added to a scanning
transmission electron microscope (STEM) that Lehigh bought 10 years
ago.
The acquisitions make Lehigh one of a handful of
universities in the world to possess an aberration-corrected electron
microscope and the only school with two. Both pieces of equipment are
expected to arrive later in April and will be installed over the
summer.
Aberration-corrected microscopes achieve their
improved resolution by correcting any distortions in the lenses that
focus the electron beam onto the specimen that is being examined. The
outer extremities of electron lenses tend to focus more strongly than
their centers, limiting the beam diameter to 1 or 2 nm, or about the
width of five to six atoms.
An aberration corrector, aided by a sophisticated
feedback mechanism, continuously measures and corrects for the "over-focus"
in the objective lens. The resulting electron beam measures 0.1 nm in
width, which is less than the diameter of most atoms.
The new instruments will give Lehigh researchers an
ability that scientists have long sought: to simultaneously image and
determine the chemical identity of individual atoms in crystalline
materials.
And they will help Kiely shed light on nano-gold.
"The current HB-603 STEM can tell us whether or not
our nanoparticles are alloyed," says Kiely. "But it doesn't tell us
whether an alloy nanoparticle is homogenous in composition or whether,
for example, we have a shell of palladium on a gold-rich core. The
aberration-corrected microscope will give us the improved resolution
that we need in order to determine this kind of effect."
Kiely will also use the new microscopes in a
collaboration he has undertaken with scientists at the University of
Wales in Cardiff. The group is attempting to identify chemical
reactions that nano-gold can catalyze.
Scientists in Japan discovered 10 years ago that
gold displays fantastic catalytic abilities when it is shrunk to 3 to
5 nm in size. If the gold particles are any bigger or smaller than
this, the element resumes its inertness.
One such reaction is the conversion of
carbon-monoxide (CO) to carbon-dioxide (CO2). Nanogold catalyzes this
at room temperature and with 100-percent efficiency. A potential
application is to aid firefighters, who now wear protective masks
containing copper-manganese-oxide. That material's effectiveness at
getting rid of CO, however, lasts only 15 minutes, while nanogold
protects for several hours.
Kiely will not soon run out of nano-projects to
tackle.
Because almost any material can be made into
nanoparticle form, he says, it should theoretically be possible to
assemble combinations of very different nanoparticles with a variety
of desired properties into 2- and 3-D structures that have engineered
colors, degrees of magnetism, conductivity, semiconductivity,
insulating properties and more.
"There's no limit to the number and variety of
self-assembled nano-materials you can make." |