|
Menu
2.1 Nanomaterials
2.2 Properties
4. Applications
4.1 Current
- Clays
- Coatings
4.2 Short-term
- Paints
- Displays
4.2 Longer-term
5.1 History
5.4 Dispersion
5.6 Properties
5.7 Applications
- Plastics
- Ceramics
|
Nanowerk > Introduction to Nanotechnology >
Introduction to Nanotechnology3.3 Nanoscale in Three Dimensions
b) Fullerenes (carbon 60)
![]() Model C60
In the mid-1980s a new class of carbon material was
discovered called carbon 60 (C60).Harry Kroto and
Richard Smalley, the experimental
chemists who discovered C60 named it "buckminsterfullerene", in recognition of the
architect Buckminster Fuller, who was well-known for building geodesic domes, and
the term fullerenes was then given to any closed
carbon cage. C60 are spherical molecules about 1nm in diameter,
comprising 60 carbon atoms arranged as 20 hexagons
and 12 pentagons: the configuration of a football. In
1990, a technique to produce larger quantities of C60 was
developed by resistively heating graphite rods in a helium
atmosphere. Several applications
are envisaged for fullerenes, such as miniature ‘ball
bearings’ to lubricate surfaces, drug delivery vehicles and
in electronic circuits.
c) Dendrimers
Dendrimers are spherical polymeric molecules,
formed through a nanoscale hierarchical self-assembly
process. There are many types of dendrimer; the smallest
is several nanometres in size. Dendrimers are used in
conventional applications such as coatings and inks, but
they also have a range of interesting properties which
could lead to useful applications. For example,
dendrimers can act as nanoscale carrier molecules and
as such could be used in drug delivery. Environmental
clean-up could be assisted by dendrimers as they can
trap metal ions, which could then be filtered out of
water with ultra-filtration techniques.
d) Quantum Dots
Nanoparticles of semiconductors (quantum dots)
were theorized in the 1970s and initially created in the
early 1980s. If semiconductor particles are made small
enough, quantum effects come into play, which limit
the energies at which electrons and holes (the absence
of an electron) can exist in the particles. As energy is
related to wavelength (or colour), this means that the
optical properties of the particle can be finely tuned
depending on its size. Thus, particles can be made to
emit or absorb specific wavelengths (colours) of light,
merely by controlling their size. Recently, quantum dots
have found applications in composites, solar cells
(Gratzel cells) and fluorescent biological labels (for
example to trace a biological molecule) which use both
the small particle size and tuneable energy levels.
Recent advances in chemistry have resulted in the
preparation of monolayer-protected, high-quality,
monodispersed, crystalline quantum dots as small as
2nm in diameter, which can be conveniently treated
and processed as a typical chemical reagent.
|
|
|
|
|