UCLA
chemists report the discovery of a remarkable new nanoscale
phenomenon: An ordinary camera flash causes the instantaneous
welding together of nanofibers made of polyaniline,
a unique synthetic polymer that can be made in either
a conducting or an insulating form. The discovery, which
the chemists call "flash welding," is published
in the November issue of the journal Nature Materials.
Numerous applications potentially could result from
this research in such areas as chemical sensors, separation
membranes and nano devices.
"We used an ordinary 35-millimeter
camera, but you could also use a laser, or any other
high-intensity light source," said Richard B.
Kaner, UCLA professor of inorganic chemistry and materials
science and engineering, and a member of the California
NanoSystems Institute at UCLA.
"I was very surprised,"
Kaner said. "My graduate student, Jiaxing Huang,
decided to take some pictures of his polyaniline nanofibers
one evening when he heard a distinct popping sound
and smelled burning plastic. Jiaxing recalled a paper
that we had discussed during a group meeting reporting
that carbon nanotubes burned up in response to a camera
flash. By adjusting the distance of the camera flash
to his material, he was able to produce smooth films
with no burning, making this new discovery potentially
useful."
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general page of The camera flash induces a chemical
reaction; it starts a chain reaction in which the
tiny nanofibers interact and cross-link, producing
heat, which leads to more spontaneous cross?linking
across the entire surface of the nanofibers, welding
them together, Kaner said. Unlike carbon nanotubes,
which burn up, this material is thermally absorbent
and can dissipate the heat well enough so that it
does not burn.
"We can envision welding
other materials together as well," Kaner added.
"One way to do this is to take two blocks of
a conventional polymer and insert polyaniline nanofibers
between them, then induce the cross-linking reaction
to produce enough heat to weld the polymer blocks
together. We can weld polyaniline to itself or to
another polymer or potentially use it to join conventional
polymers together." (A polymer is a long chain
of molecules, commonly known as plastics.)
Because only the part exposed
to light welds together, chemists can create patterns
by covering sections that they do not want welded;
they can control what parts weld together.
Kaner's research team searched
for whether any conventional techniques have this
same welding property. They found a recent commercial
process called laser welding, now used in the electronics
industry, in which a laser beam is used to weld together
conventional polymers. "The trouble with laser
welding," Kaner said, "is that lasers generally
have a small cross-section and consume a lot of power.
Our research has the potential of revolutionizing
this process."
Nanofibers have high surface
areas and important properties, from sensing to flash
welding. "This shows why nano is important,"
Kaner said. "Here's a good example of where nano
materials possess a property that conventional materials
do not have."
Kaner and Huang were the first
chemists to produce large quantities of pure polyaniline
nanofibers, which can also be used for sensors --
findings they published last year in collaboration
with Dr. Bruce Weiller and Shabnam Virji at Aerospace
Corp. The nanofibers have a much greater response
in a shorter time than sensors made with conventional
polyaniline.
Jiaxing Huang has started a
UC Berkeley postdoctoral fellowship.
The research is funded by the
Microelectronics Advanced Research Corp.
Contact: Stuart Wolpert
stuartw@college.ucla.edu
310-206-0511
University of California - Los Angeles
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