Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




Nano skins show promise as flexible electronic devices

Theallineed/NC&T/CU
"Researchers have long been interested in making composites of nanotubes and polymers, but it can be difficult to engineer the interfaces between the two materials," says Pulickel Ajayan, the Henry Burlage Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. "We have found a way to get arrays of nanotubes into a soft polymer matrix without disturbing the shape, size, or alignment of the nanotubes."

Nanotube arrays typically don't maintain their shape when transferred because they are held together by weak forces. But the team has developed a new procedure that allows them to grow an array of nanotubes on a separate platform and then fill the array with a soft polymer. When the polymer hardens, it is essentially peeled back from the platform, leaving a flexible skin with organized arrays of nanotubes embedded throughout.

The skins can be bent, flexed, and rolled up like a scroll, all while maintaining their ability to conduct electricity, which makes them ideal materials for electronic paper and other flexible electronics, according to Ajayan.

"The general concept - growing nanotubes on a stiff platform in various organizations, and then transferring them to a flexible platform without losing this organization - could have many other applications, all the way from adhesive structures and Velcro-like materials to nanotube interconnects for electronics," says Swastik Kar, a postdoctoral researcher in materials science and engineering at Rensselaer and lead author of the paper, along with Yung Joon Jung, assistant professor of mechanical and industrial engineering at Northeastern University and a recent doctoral student in Ajayan's Rensselaer lab.

For example, with researchers at the University of Akron, Ajayan is using a similar process to mimic the agile gecko, with its uncanny ability to run up walls and across ceilings. The team recently reported a process for creating artificial gecko feet with 200 times the sticking power of the real thing, using nanotubes to imitate the thousands of microscopic hairs on a gecko's footpad. Ajayan's team is also working with Ali Dhinojwala, associate professor of polymer science at Akron, to develop a range of products with nanotubes and flexible substrates.

The researchers also envision using the process to build miniature pressure sensors and gas detectors. "There are a lot of possibilities if you have an easy way to transfer the nanotubes to any platform, and that is what we have developed," Ajayan says.

A flexible, conducting "nano skin" with organized arrays of nanotubes embedded throughout. (Photo: Rensselaer/Yung Joon Jung )
The team has shown that the flexible materials demonstrate an extremely useful physical property called "field emission." When a voltage is applied to certain materials, electrons are pulled out from the surface, which can be used to produce high-resolution electronic displays. "Nanotubes are very good field emitters because they have a low threshold for emission and they produce high currents," Kar says. "But when you lay nanotubes very close to each other, each tube tends to shield its neighbor from the electric field."

This effect has limited the development of field emission devices based on densely packed, aligned nanotubes, but it seems to go away when the nanotubes are embedded in a polymer, according to Kar. Tests showed that the team's "nano skins" are excellent field emitters when compared to some of the best values obtained by other research groups.

Several other Rensselaer researchers also collaborated on the project, along with colleagues from New Mexico State University. Funding for this research was provided by two National Science Foundation Nanoscale Science and Engineering Centers: Rensselaer's Center for Directed Assembly of Nanostructures and Northeastern's Center for High-rate Nanomanufacturing. Additional funding came from the Focus Center-New York, which is part of the Interconnect Focus Center.

About the Author
©2006 All rights reserved

More articles
Double crystal fusion tabletop accelerator
Reversible microlenses chemical detection
Safer metal alloys
Light-emitting semiconductors
New battery for hybrid cars
Sound unroof jet engines
Deafness cochlear implants
Cybercrime investigation fingerprint
Quantum computer interrogation
Active cookie cyber crooks
Liquid nanodrops
Population inversion
Quantum breakup bits
Robotic smooth operators
Cell phones airplane
Forensic technology cyber thieves
noble metal nitrides
Nanoparticles Biocompatible capsules
nano skins polymeres
bacteria-powered fuel cells
Quotes
If I work incessantly to the last, nature owes me another form of existence when the present one collapses. -- Goethe, 1829

If a few idiots want to risk their necks flying across the country thats fine, but nothing will ever replace trains.


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Secretary-General welcomes 'historic' election of Lebanese President
United Nations Secretary-General today congratulated the Lebanese people on the election of President Michel Suleimane, ending the deadlock that has endured in the Middle Eastern nation since last November.
What is your favorite new tech item?
iPod
Plasma screen
Game console
Videophone
Other
 
Things to ponder
What was the best thing before sliced bread?

Did you know...
Female hyenas have a pseudo penis.

Quote of the day
Love is the triumph of imagination over intelligence.
HL Mencken

Featured article
Implementing New Technology
Quite often, in the eager anticipation to install the latest and greatest engine, the other parts of the car were forgotten or overlooked. Sure you have a powerful new engine, but your steering wheel is gone.

 
© 2002 - 2007 Lexur