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Colorized transmission electron micrograph showing chains of cobalt nanoparticles.
Image credit: G. Cheng, A.R. Hight Walker/NIST
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The NIST work, scheduled to be featured on the
cover of an upcoming issue of Langmuir* (an American Chemical Society
journal), is the first to demonstrate the formation and control of
centimeter-long chains of magnetic nanoparticles of a consistent size
and quality in a solution. The researchers spent several years
learning how to make cobalt particles with controllable size and shape,
and they hope to use this knowledge to eventually "build" useful
structures.
The researchers induce the nanoparticles to form
linear chains by subjecting them to a weak magnetic field--about the
same strength as a refrigerator magnet. The particles line up because
the nanoparticles act like tiny bar magnets, all facing the same
direction as the applied field. Once this alignment occurs, the
attraction between particles is so strong that reversing the direction
of the applied magnetic field causes the whole chain to rotate 180
degrees. When the magnetic field is turned off, the chains fold into
three-dimensional coils. When the solution is lightly shaken, the
chains fall apart into small rings. NIST scientists used optical and
transmission electron microscopes to characterize these structures.
Magnetic particles have already been used in
medical imaging and information storage, and nano-sized particles may
offer unique or improved properties. For example, magnetic
nanoparticle dyes may improve contrast between healthy and diseased
tissue in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a possibility under study
by a different NIST research group. The authors of the Langmuir paper
are now developing methods to improve the biocompatibility of these
magnetic nanoparticles. |