Archive for the ‘Nanoscale’ Category

Polystyrene fiber mats could soak up oil spills

Nanoscale ‘HOT’ article

Scientists from China have synthesized novel polystyrene (PS) fibrous mats consisting of highly porous fibers which show much higher oil absorption capacities compared to the commercially available polypropylene fibers.

PS fibersThe authors say that such regulation of micro- and nanostructures of the PS fibers will widen the range of their applications in self-cleaning materials, ultra-high sensitivity sensors, tissue engineering and ion exchange materials.

Read the Nanoscale article today:

Subtle regulation of the micro- and nanostructures of electrospun polystyrene fibers and their application in oil absorption
Jinyou Lin, Bin Ding, Jianmao Yang, Jianyong Yu and Gang Sun
Nanoscale, 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C1NR10895F

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Simple synthesis of potentially very useful nanostructures

SEM images of materialsProfessor Kripa Varanasi and his team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have discovered a method of producing copper oxide nanowires on the surface of copper particles: a simple sintering process produces the structures. The amount of nanowire coverage observed is related to the size of the original copper particle.

The authors predict various applications of the structures including in thermal management – cooling boilers for example – or in catalysis.

The team are currently trying testing other metals to see if they react in the same way.

You can read more about this exciting work in their MIT press release.

Read the full Nanoscale paper today!

Size-dependent thermal oxidation of copper: single-step synthesis of hierarchical nanostructures
Christopher J. Love, J. David Smith, Yuehua Cui and Kripa K. Varanasi
DOI: 10.1039/C1NR10993F

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What do zinc oxide and a rosy-faced lovebird have in common?

It’s all to do with light emission. The barbs on the parrot’s feather contain spongy 3D amorphous macroporous structures that produce a photonic band gap of 550nm, which coincides with the visible emission range of zinc oxide materials. So, scientists have used the parrot’s feather as a template to make zinc oxide photonic nanostructrues.

Zinc oxide has been studied for its UV light emitting property to make new classes of optical devices such as ZnO lasers. In this capacity, it’s important to suppress the visible emission caused by zinc or oxygen defects in the zinc oxide materials. But, its ordered structure leads to an unstable modulation of the emission spectra and limits its applications. Combining zinc oxide materials with photonic amorphous structures with stable photonic band gaps is therefore important, say the researchers.

Their new material reduces the visible emission and amplifies the UV emission.

Read the Nanoscale paper hot off the press today:

Fabrication of ZnO photonic amorphous diamond nanostructure from parrot feather for modulated photoluminescence properties
Z Zhang, K Yu, N Liao, H Yin, L Lou, Q Yu, Y Liao and Z Zhu,
Nanoscale, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/c1nr11079a

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Top Ten most-read Nanoscale articles in September

This month sees the following articles in Nanoscale that are in the top ten most accessed:

Li ion battery materials with core–shell nanostructures 
Liwei Su, Yu Jing and Zhen Zhou 
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 3967-3983 
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10550g 

Spherical silica micro/nanomaterials with hierarchical structures: Synthesis and applications 
Xin Du and Junhui He 
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 3984-4002 
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10660k 

6.5% efficient perovskite quantum-dot-sensitized solar cell 
Jeong-Hyeok Im, Chang-Ryul Lee, Jin-Wook Lee, Sang-Won Park and Nam-Gyu Park 
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 4088-4093 
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10867k 

Inorganic nanostructures grown on graphene layers 
Won Il Park, Chul-Ho Lee, Jung Min Lee, Nam-Jung Kim and Gyu-Chul Yi 
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 3522-3533 
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10370a 

One-pot formation of SnO2 hollow nanospheres and a-Fe2O3@SnO2 nanorattles with large void space and their lithium storage properties
Jun Song Chen, Chang Ming Li, Wen Wen Zhou, Qing Yu Yan, Lynden A. Archer and Xiong Wen Lou
Nanoscale, 2009, 1, 280-285 
DOI: 10.1039/b9nr00102f 

Preparation and visible light photocatalytic activity of Ag/TiO2/graphene nanocomposite 
Yanyuan Wen, Hanming Ding and Yongkui Shan 
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 4411-4417 
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10604j 

Graphene edges: a review of their fabrication and characterization 
Xiaoting Jia, Jessica Campos-Delgado, Mauricio Terrones, Vincent Meunier and Mildred S. Dresselhaus 
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 86-95 
DOI: 10.1039/c0nr00600a 

Mesoporous silica nanoparticles loading doxorubicin reverse multidrug resistance: performance and mechanism 
Jianan Shen, Qianjun He, Yu Gao, Jianlin Shi and Yaping Li 
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 4314-4322 
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10580a 

Asymmetric anatase TiO2 nanocrystals with exposed high-index facets and their excellent lithium storage properties
Hao Bin Wu, Jun Song Chen, Xiong Wen (David) Lou and Huey Hoon Hng 
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 4082-4084 
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10854a 

Facile synthesis of two-dimensional graphene/SnO2/Pt ternary hybrid nanomaterials and their catalytic properties 
Chengzhou Zhu, Ping Wang, Li Wang, Lei Han and Shaojun Dong 
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 4376-4382 
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10634a 

Why not take a look at the articles today and blog your thoughts and comments below.

Fancy submitting an article to Nanoscale? Then why not submit to us today or alternatively email us  your suggestions.

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Nanoscience: Killing bacteria in broad daylight

‘HOT’ article: Killing bacteria in broad daylight

Scientists have coated a TiO2–InVO4 film onto a glass layer and observed that the coating kills E. coli under ambient light.

Titanium oxide has been used by itself before, but it has to be activated with ultraviolet light. Adding InVO4 – a stable narrow band gap semiconductor – ensures that the coating can absorb visible light. Now, the coating can be activated in daylight, increasing its potential applications in disinfecting surfaces.

 Read the ‘HOT’ Nanoscale article today:

Understanding bactericidal performance on ambient light activated TiO2-InVO4 nanostructured films
Z He, Q Xu and T T Y Tan,
Nanoscale, 2011
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr11126d

 killing bacteria

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Probes inspired by butterflies

Inspired by the feeding tube of butterflies, US scientists have made a flexible and porous artificial proboscis that could be used to collect tiny liquid samples. The probe can be operated remotely to collect hazardous liquids.

Konstantin Kornev from Clemson University and his team wanted to find a way to sample miniscule amounts of liquid. They needed a probe that would be flexible and easy to manipulate. After seeing the effective way that butterflies and moths suck up their food using proboscises, they decided to make an artificial version.

‘A proboscis has two types of pores: very small to draw the liquid in and large, to transport the liquid as pipes would do,’ says Kornev. To mimic this system, the team made a bundle of porous polymer fibres and twisted them into a yarn using a new electrospinning technique. Electrospinning works by charging a liquid medium and accelerating it from a high electrical potential to a lower one to produce long fibres. The new part of the technique involves collecting the fibres with rolled brushes that act as arms. The arms are then spun in opposite directions to make a yarn. ‘Twisting these fibres into a yarn was a challenge,’ says Kornev. The yarn’s large interfibre pores provide rapid wicking and the small pores provide a strong capillary action.

 Butterfly

Mimicking a butterfly proboscis: the diagram shows the artificial proboscis absorbing a droplet. The solid black fibre on the left is the artificial proboscis; the grey fibre on the right is a nylon yarn 

To manipulate the proboscis so it could be directed to its target – a droplet or even a single cell or gland – Kornev embedded magnetic particles into the porous polymer so that it could be controlled by applying an electric or magnetic field. With this flexibility, the proboscis can be attached to a microfluidic device for sampling hard to reach areas, in sensors or in forensic probes, or to sample hazardous substances. 

Joshua Edel, an expert in nanobiotechnology from Imperial College London, comments: ‘They are one of the first groups to develop nanoporous flexible probes that work as artificial proboscises. Assuming they can be made in a reproducible manner, I see no reason why this system would not have commercial implications.’  

‘We developed a special automated technique to make reproducible proboscises,’ says Kornev, who is now working on adding a sensing function to the proboscises in the hope of developing a probe that can sample and analyse minute amounts of fluids. 

Holly Sheahan

Read the paper from Nanoscale:

Nanoporous artificial proboscis for probing minute amount of liquids
Chen-Chih Tsai, Petr Mikes, Taras Andrukh, Edgar White, Daria Monaenkova, Oleksandr Burtovyy, Ruslan Burtovyy, Binyamin Rubin, David Lukas, Igor Luzinov, Jeffery R. Owens and Konstantin G. Kornev
Nanoscale, 2011
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10773a

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Beating the counterfeiters

Scientists from China have created nanoparticles with dual mode colour for anti-counterfeiting ink, making it harder to imitate than current inks.

Lehui Lu and colleagues from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun, have designed dual mode fluorescent lanthanide doped nanocrystals to make the ink. The nanocrystals display upconversion, in which particles absorb light of one wavelength and emit light of a shorter wavelength, and downconversion, in which a high energy photon is split into two lower energy photons. These are triggered by near infrared and ultraviolet light, respectively, to produce different colours. The crystals would make the ink difficult to replicate if used on important documents as an anti-counterfeiting measure.

Traditional anti-counterfeiting materials only emit one colour so are more easily replicated. Including more colours involves mixing different nanocrystals, which could affect ink quality. Now, ‘colour tuning can be achieved from a single nanocrystal, avoiding a decrease in the ink’s quality’, says Lu.

Beating the counterfeiters

Exposing film stamped with the ink to near infrared light caused a green emission, while under ultraviolet light, a colour change from green to blue was seen

The team bound the nanocrystals to oleic acid, which stabilises them in organic solvents so that they can be applied to paper. They tested the crystals by stamping the ink onto a transparent film. In daylight, the effect was invisible. However, when they shone infrared light on the film the stamped section was clearly seen, with a bright green upconversion emission. When they changed to ultraviolet light, the colour changed to blue because of the downconversion.

The nanocrystals could also be developed for use in biological imaging, as Yadong Li, an expert in lanthanide-doped nanocrystals from Tsinghua University, P. R. China, points out. ‘The near infrared emission is suitable for in vivo imaging, owing to the weak autofluorescence background and deeper penetration,’ he says.

The next step for Lu is to increase the nanocrystals’ quantum yield by increasing the number of molecules participating in the process. ‘Compared to traditional organic dyes,’ explains Lu, ‘the quantum yield of oleic acid-stabilised lanthanide doped fluoride nanocrystals is relatively low. Improving the quantum yield is a big challenge.’

Rachel Cooper

Read the paper from Nanoscale:

Designing lanthanide-doped nanocrystals with both up- and down-conversion luminescence for anti-counterfeiting
Yanlan Liu, Kelong Ai and Lehui Lu
Nanoscale, 2011
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10752f

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Nanocacti are good photoanodes for dye-sensitised solar cells

FESEM imageNovel Zn-Sn-O nanocactus films, synthesized by a simple hydrothermal method, display overall power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) of 2.21 per cent when used as the photoanode of dye-sensitised solar cells. After treatment with TiCl4 the PCE rises to 6.62 per cent, comparing favourably with P25 DSSCs (6.97 per cent).

The authors suggest that such materials could have excellent prospects for use as photoanodes in DSSCs.

For full details on this exciting work read this HOT Nanoscale article today:

Novel Zn–Sn–O nanocactus with excellent transport properties as photoanode material for high performance dye-sensitized solar cells
Xincun Dou, Nripan Mathews, Qing Wang, Stevin Snellius Pramana, Yeng Ming Lam and Subodh Mhaisalkar
Nanoscale, 2011
DOI: 10.1039/C1NR11083G

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Simple route to perpendicularly aligned nanorods

Scientists in Ireland have developed a method to convert perpendicularly aligned  CdS and CdSe nanorods to their silver and copper chalcogenide equivalents. The nanorod dimensions and superlattice order remain unchanged during the process.

Such nanorods have potential applications in solar cells. The authors envisage that this new technique can be extended to other material systems.

Read the full HOT Nanoscale communication to find out more:

A facile spin-cast route for cation exchange of multilayer perpendicularly-aligned nanorod assemblies
Dervla Kelly, Ajay Singh, Christopher A. Barrett, Catriona O’Sullivan, Claudia Coughlan, Fathima R. Laffir, Colm O’Dwyer and Kevin M. Ryan
Nanoscale, 2011
DOI: 10.1039/C1NR11031D

Image of CdS nanorods and Cu7S4 nanorods

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Epigenetic modulation of human breast cancer

‘HOT’ article

Molecular mechanisms and epigenetic characteristics of the antineoplastic action of endohedral metallofullerenol nanoparticles are investigated and are found to have uniquely antineoplastic efficacy and low toxicity.

imageRead the Nanoscale paper today:

Epigenetic modulation of human breast cancer by metallofullerenol nanoparticles: in vivo treatment and in vitro analysis
Jie Meng, Jianmin Xing, Yingze Wang, Juan Lu, Yuliang Zhao, Xueyun Gao, Paul C. Wang, Lee Jia and Xingjie Liang
Nanoscale, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1NR10898K

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