| Tiny
nanocables, 1,000 times smaller than a human hair, could
become key parts of toxin detectors, miniaturized solar
cells and powerful computer chips.
The technique for making the
nanocables was invented by UC Davis chemical engineers
led by Pieter Stroeve, professor of chemical engineering
and materials science. They manufacture the cables
in the nano-sized pores of a template membrane. The
insides of the pores are coated with gold. Layers
of other semiconductors, such as tellurium, cadmium
sulfide or zinc sulfide, are electrochemically deposited
in the gold tube until a solid cable forms, then the
membrane is dissolved, leaving finished cables behind.
Stroeve envisions many uses
for these nanocables. For example, the cables' ability
to conduct electricity changes when they are exposed
to different chemicals or toxins. Earlier nano-devices
could only detect whether a toxin was present, said
Ruxandra Vidu, a postdoctoral scholar working with
Stroeve. But nanocables will go further, measuring
the quantity of toxins.
Stroeve's team can also construct
arrays of nanocables. "You put a copper tape
on the tops of the nanocables before the template
is dissolved," Stroeve said. "You're left
with nanocables sticking up at right angles from the
tape."
These arrays have a very large
surface area -- 1000 times greater than on a flat
device of the same size. They could be used to efficiently
capture sunlight in a tiny solar cell.
Nanocables could also be used
to make computer chips more powerful by packing transistors
closer together. Computers now contain silicon chips
with metal transistors affixed to the surface. "With
our new technique, we could embed transistors into
the silicon chips to begin with," Stroeve said.
The work is published online
in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
Media contact(s):
• Pieter Stroeve, Chemical Engineering and Materials
Science, (530) 752-8778, pstroeve@ucdavis.edu
• Andy Fell, UC Davis News Service, (530) 752-4533,
ahfell@ucdavis.edu
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