Dr. Rafal Klajn and postdoctoral fellow Dr. Gurvinder Singh of the
Institute's Organic Chemistry Department used nanocubes of an iron oxide
material called magnetite. As the name implies, this material is
naturally magnetic: It is found all over the place, including inside
bacteria that use it to sense the Earth's magnetic field.
Magnetism is just one of the forces acting on the nanoparticles.
Together with the research group of Prof. Petr Král of the University of
Illinois, Chicago, Klajn and Singh developed theoretical models to
understand how the various forces could push and pull the tiny bits of
magnetite into different formations. "Different types of forces compel
the nanoparticles to align in different ways," says Klajn. "These can
compete with one another; so the idea is to find the balance of
competing forces that can induce the self-assembly of the particles into
novel materials." The models suggested that the shape of the
nanoparticles is important -- only cubes would provide a proper balance
of forces required for pulling together into helical formations.
SEM image of a well-defined double helix.
Credit: Image courtesy of Weizmann Institute of Science
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The researchers found that the two main competing forces are
magnetism and the van der Waals force. Magnetism causes the magnetic
particles to both attract and repel one another, prompting the cubic
particles to align at their corners. Van der Waals forces, on the other
hand, pull the sides of the cubes closer together, coaxing them to line
up in a row. When these forces act together on the tiny cubes, the
result is the step-like alignment that produces helical structures.
In their experiments, the scientists exposed relatively high
concentrations of magnetite nanocubes placed in a solution to a magnetic
field. The long, rope-like helical chains they obtained after the
solution was evaporated were surprisingly uniform. They repeated the
experiment with nanoparticles of other shapes but, as predicted, only
cubes had just the right physical shape to align in a helix. Klajn and
Singh also found that they could get chiral strands -- all wound in the
same direction -- with very high particle concentrations in which a
number of strands assembled closely together. Apparently the competing
forces can "take into consideration" the most efficient way to pack the
strands into the space.
Although the nanocube strands look nice enough to knit, Klajn says it
is too soon to begin thinking of commercial applications. The immediate
value of the work, he says, is that it has proven a fundamental
principle of nanoscale self-assembly. "Although magnetite has been
well-studied -- also its nanoparticle form -- for many decades, no one
has observed these structures before," says Klajn. "Only once we
understand how the various physical forces act on nanoparticles can we
begin to apply the insights to such goals as the fabrication of
previously unknown, self-assembled materials."
source: Weizmann Institute of Science.
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