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Soon, designer nanomaterials on-demand

Washington, Sat, 20 Mar 2010 ANI

Washington, March 20 (ANI): A team of scientists has shown how it is possible to make designer nanomaterials on-demand.

 

The researchers, from Berkeley Lab's Molecular Foundry, in collaboration with a researcher at the University of California, Berkeley, have shown how nanocomposites with desired properties can be designed and fabricated by first assembling nanocrystals and nanorods coated with short organic molecules, called ligands.

 

These ligands are then replaced with clusters of metal chalcogenides, such as copper sulfide.

 

As a result, the clusters link to the nanocrystal or nanorod building blocks and help create a stable nanocomposite.

 

The team has applied this scheme to more than 20 different combinations of materials, including close-packed nanocrystal spheres for thermoelectric materials and vertically aligned nanorods for solar cells.

 

"We're just starting to understand how combining materials on the nanoscale can open up new possibilities for electronic properties and efficient energy technologies," said Delia Milliron, Director of the Inorganic Nanostructures Facility at the Molecular Foundry.

 

"This new process for fabricating inorganic nanocomposites gives us unprecedented ability to tune composition and control morphology," she added.

 

Delia Milliron, of Berkeley Lab's Molecular Foundry, led the development of a universal method by which designer nanomaterials can be created on-demand.

 

The researchers anticipate demand from users seeking this latest addition to the Foundry's arsenal of materials synthesis capabilities, as this mix-and-match approach to nanocomposites could be used in an infinite list of applications, including materials for such popular uses as battery electrodes, photovoltaics and electronic data storage.

 

"The beauty of our method is not just the flexibility of compositions that can be achieved, but the ease with which this can be done," said Ravisubhash Tangirala, a Foundry post-doctoral researcher working with Milliron.

 

"No specialized equipment is required, a variety of substrates can be used and the process is scalable," he added. (ANI)

 


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