July
11, 2005 --- New
York University physicists have applied a ground-breaking nanotechnology method
to create three-dimensional quasicrystals, highly ordered structures that, unlike
conventional crystals, never repeat themselves.
Metallic quasicrystals created from exotic alloys have shown promise for storing
hydrogen more efficiently than crystalline hosts. Their non-repeating structure
has the potential to dramatically strengthen industrial and commercial products.
The NYU quasicrystals, by contrast, are made of glass and plastic and have
potentially revolutionary optical properties.
The research, authored by NYU physicists David Grier
and Yael Roichman, appears in the July 11 issue of Optics
Express , a journal of the Optical Society of
America.
Quasicrystals, discovered in the mid-1980s, are different from crystals, whose
periodic structures resemble the patterns of tiles on a bathroom floor. By
contrast, quasicrystals do not have this property, called translational symmetry,
but, like crystals, can be rotated into registry with themselves, a property
called rotational symmetry.
Quasicrystals' rotational symmetry gives them many of the properties of conventional
crystals. These same symmetries are responsible for conventional semiconducting
crystals' ability to act as switches for electrons. However, because quasicrystals
do not possess the translational symmetry of conventional crystals, they have
the freedom to take a broader range of forms, opening up the potential to serve
a range of functions.
The quasicrystals reported by Roichman and Grier are created from tiny glass
spheres, each comparable in size to the wavelength of light, stacked precisely
in mathematically defined configurations. Like the crystalline structures responsible
for the irridescence of gem opals and the colors of butterfly wings, these
quasicrystalline sphere packings diffract different wavelengths of light into
different directions, creating a rainbow-like display. For particular structures,
and particular wavelengths, however, the quasicrystals offer no path at all
for light. The resulting gaps in the rainbow, known as photonic bandgaps, can
be manipulated to create switches for light. For instance, when translated
into structures with features comparable to the wavelength of light, these
properties of quasicrystals should enable them to manipulate light in much
the same way that semiconductors manipulate electrons.
This has already been achieved for two-dimensional structures by previous researchers.
However, prior to the work of Roichman and Grier, scientists had not been able
to branch out into three-dimensional quasicrystals - thereby reaping the full
benefits of their unique properties - because of the inability to create this
class of quasicrystals with the proper materials at the right size scale.
Previous attempts at addressing this challenge included the use of lithographic
techniques. In a departure from this approach, Roichman, Grier, and their colleagues
used a method developed by Grier's group called holographic optical trapping.
This allows scientists to manipulate objects as small as a few nanometers across
and as large as several hundred micrometers. These “optical tweezers” allow
scientists to organize microscopic objects into interesting and useful configurations,
to dissect them, to assemble them into devices, or to chemically transform
them, all with unprecedented precision. Using this method on quasicrystals,
Roichman and Grier were able to organize hundreds of free-floating microspheres
into densely packed structures defined by the mathematical definition of quasicrystalline
order.
Grier is part of an NYU team of internationally recognized physicists in the
field of soft condensed matter physics, a new inter-disciplinary field that
explores how materials are organized at microscopic levels, and which studies
the physical properties of malleable materials such as colloids and polymers.
With Grier, Paul Chaikin, formerly of Princeton University, and David Pine,
formerly of the University of California, Santa Barbara, form the core of NYU's
Center for Soft Matter Research. Yael Roichman is a postdoctoral researcher
in Grier's group.
Contact:
James Devitt
(212) 998-6808
james.devitt@nyu.edu
|