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“Nano Skins” Show Promise as Flexible Electronic Devices
Troy, N.Y. — A team of researchers has developed a new
process to make flexible, conducting “nano skins” for a variety
of applications, from electronic paper to sensors for detecting
chemical and biological agents. The materials, which are
described in the March issue of the journal Nano
Letters, combine the strength and conductivity of carbon
nanotubes with the flexibility of traditional polymers.
“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.
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.
Nanotechnology at Rensselaer
In September 2001, the National Science Foundation
selected Rensselaer as one of the six original sites for a new
Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC). As part of the
U.S. National Nanotechnology Initiative, the program is housed
within the Rensselaer Nanotechnology Center and forms a
partnership between Rensselaer, the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. The
mission of Rensselaer’s Center for Directed Assembly of
Nanostructures is to integrate research, education, and
technology dissemination, and to serve as a national resource
for fundamental knowledge in directed assembly of
nanostructures.
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Published
March 1,
2006 |
Contact: Jason Gorss
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: gorssj@rpi.edu |
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