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Conjugated polymers easily implanted in rigid structure
Sandia National Laboratories News Release
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Intelligent nanostructures that report on their environment by changing color from blue to fluorescent red under mechanical, chemical, or thermal stress
have been created by researchers at Sandia National Laboratories and the University of New
Mexico.
Most immediately, the self-assembling structures as durable as seashells may lower costs by reducing the need for expensive manufactured devices like stress detectors, chemical analyzers, and thermometers. "The material can distinguish between different solvents," says Sandia senior scientist and UNM professor Jeff Brinker. "Theres a high correlation of color with the polarity of the solvent." The material also can report changes in mechanical stress and temperature. When the environmental disturbance is removed, the structures change back to their original color in some cases, making them potentially reusable. "The material is of interest to NASA one of the sponsors of our research
for a thin film for an inflatable structure that would aid in the inhabitation of
Mars," says Brinker. "The structures skin would require a very thin yet
strong membrane with low permeability that could sense mechanical damage from hazards such
as meteorites or sandstorms." The elegantly simple method, which involves a technique that links monomers into polymers in an orderly fashion within a nanostructure, is published this week in the April 19 Nature. In seconds, robust housing for conjugated polymers Underlying the immediate application described above, the Sandia/UNM method is a generic, efficient solution to a problem that has puzzled modern materials science: how to efficiently distribute conjugated polymers inexpensive carbon-based polymers that due to special bonding patterns carry electrical current and produce changes in a materials optical properties within a hard, protective structure. Conjugated polymers are prominent enough scientifically that the Nobel Prize was awarded this year to Alan J. Heeger (Univ. of Calif. at Santa Barbara), Alan G. MacDiarmid (Univ. of Pa.), and Hideki Shirakawa (Univ. of Tsukuba, Japan) for initially developing the field. In 1977, they oxidized polyacetylene (a solid polymer prepared from the flammable gas acetylene) with iodine to yield a material many times more electrically conductive than the untreated, semiconducting polyacetylene. But a still-open question is how best to fashion a structure for these potentially
useful but fragile extended molecules. Conjugated polymers "while u wait" It takes only seconds for the Sandia/UNM method to evenly pre-distribute monomers simpler precursors of polymers within a silica matrix through self-assembly. Exposure to UV light polymerizes the monomers into conjugated polymers housed in nanoscopic channels that penetrate the matrix of the material. The result is a nanocomposite that is mechanically robust, optically transparent, and produces telltale changes of color under changing environmental conditions. Technical discussion Sandia researchers Alan Burns and Darryl Sasaki had characterized the responsiveness of
two-dimensional films of these polymers to local stresses and temperature changes.
However, their work, published last year in the American Chemical Society journal Langmuir,
showed the organic materials to be "soft" and lacking the robustness required in
harsh environments. The self-assembly method is based on the scientifically well-known tendency of
two-sided detergent molecules, composed of hydrophilic (water-loving) and hydrophobic
(water-hating) portions, to spontaneously form spherical molecular assemblies and periodic
three-dimensional nanostructures in solutions of water. Thin films, nanoscopic spheres, intelligent ink, light-alterable pore sizes The achievement is the groups latest in making use of self-assembling two-sided
molecules. The earliest, simplest version of the method was first reported in Nature
in September 1997. In that paper the group described how detergent molecules, alcohol,
silica, and water could be used to self-assemble a thin film with precisely defined pores
for membranes, sensors, and low-k dielectrics. Sandia is a multiprogram Department of Energy laboratory, operated by a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation. With facilities in Albuquerque, N.M., and Livermore, Calif., Sandia has major R&D responsibilities in national security, energy, environmental technologies and economic competitiveness. This news release is available at http://www.sandia.gov/media/NewsRel/NR2001/conjug.htm For more information Research contact : Jeff
Brinker Media contact: Neal Singer Sandia's home page :
http://www.sandia.gov
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