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Cornell Molecule Mimics Nature
Molecules generated by a class of designer macromolecules
could lead to improvements in solar-cell and fuel-cell
technology and electronic devices.
These synthesized molecules self-assemble themselves
into structures with dimensions on the order of
ten nanometers, an unusual process that mimics
natures most fundamental system of organizing
living tissue. (One nanometer is about the width
of three silicon atoms).
The development of the new class of molecules
was reported in the journal Science (Sept. 10)
by Ulrich Wiesner, professor of materials science
and engineering at Cornell University, and his
research team consisting of post-doctoral researcher
Byoung-Ki Cho and Ph.D. candidate Anurag Jain,
and physics professor Sol Gruner, director of
the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source.
The Cornell team designed the molecules to imitate
natures system of self-assembly: Our bodies
are made up of functional molecular assemblies
that form spontaneously. By mimicking this natural
system, the researchers say, it is possible to
design nanoscale structures that otherwise would
be impossible to manufacture, ultimately leading
to the construction of devices and machines whose
dimensions are measured in nanometers. In just
the past two years the microelectronics industry
has shown an interest in self-assembly as it searches
for techniques to create devices with dimensions
smaller than those possible with lithography.
Essentially, these new designer macromolecules
can be programmed. We can encode information
about the self-assembly behavior into their molecular
architecture, says Wiesner. It is
an exciting research direction known as molecular
engineering. The Science paper describes
how researcher Cho took molecular design concepts
from two known classes of synthetic macromolecules
and combined them into a single one. The first
was block copolymers, first synthesized in the
1950s. The second concept was dendrimers, tree-like
macromolecules synthesized by techniques developed
in the 1980s and 1990s, partly by Cornell researchers.
The resulting molecule, called an extended amphiphilic
dendron (cubic micelles, A in illustration above),
shows a combination of behaviors, that researchers
worldwide had sought for the past decade.
One of the most curious characteristics of the
new class is that they change their structure
several times as the temperature rises, and each
stable phase produces a different behavior. Their
self-assemblies range from one-dimensional cylinders
(B) to two-dimensional lamellae (C) to three-dimensional
continuous cubic structures (D). Wiesner says
when doped with lithium salts, ion transport
the transport of electrical charges along nanometer-sized
channels self-assembled by the molecules
can be observed in these phases. This, he says,
would make the continuous cubic structure particularly
relevant for applications such as batteries,
fuel cells and solar cells.
Wiesner notes that one interesting property of
the novel materials described in the Science paper
is that of a supra-molecular switch.
Electrical conductivity, he says, can change suddenly
and dramatically with very small changes in temperature.
The materials thus could have immediate
applications in temperature sensing, he
says.
He describes the materials as the result of an
ongoing evolution. People have studied small
molecules for a long time, then they started to
make linear, then blocked macromolecules and then
dendrimers, he says. Studies of their
behavior generated a toolbox. We now know how
certain structural design elements give rise to
certain behaviors. We took two design features
that have been studied for a long time and combined
them into a new molecule and interesting stuff
happened.
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