One
of the great challenges in the field of nanotechnology
is optical imaging-specifically, how to design a
microscope that produces high-resolution images of
the nano-sized objects that researchers are trying
to study. For example, a typical DNA molecule is
only about three nanometers wide-so tiny that the
contours of its surface are obscured by light waves,
which are hundreds of nanometers long.
Now, researchers from Stanford University have greatly
improved the optical mismatch between nanoscale objects
and light by creating the ``bowtie nanoantenna,``
a device 400 times smaller than the width of a human
hair that can compress ordinary light waves into
an intense optical spot only 20 nanometers wide.
These miniature spotlights may one day allow researchers
to produce the first detailed images of proteins,
DNA molecules and synthetic nano-objects, such carbon
nanotube bundles.
``One of our goals is to build a microscope with
bowtie antennas that we can scan over a single molecule,``
says W.E. Moerner, the Harry S. Mosher Professor
of Chemistry at Stanford.
He and his Stanford colleagues introduced the bowtie
nanoantenna earlier this year in a study published
in the journal Physical Review Letters that was co-authored
by postdoctoral fellow P. James Schuck and graduate
student David Fromm in the Department of Chemistry,
and Professor Emeritus Gordon Kino and graduate student
Arvind Sundaramurthy in the Department of Electrical
Engineering.
Golden bowties
The bowtie nanoantenna consists of two triangular
pieces of gold, each about 75 nanometers long, whose
tips face each other in the shape of a miniature
bowtie. The device operates like an antenna for a
radio receiver, but instead of amplifying radio waves,
the bowtie takes energy from an 830-nanometer beam
of near-infrared light and squeezes it into a 20-nanometer
gap that separates the two gold triangles. The result
is a concentrated speck of light that is a thousand
times more intense than the incoming near-infrared
beam.
``What you end up with is a very small optical spot
that you could scan to make detailed images of molecules
and other nano-particles,`` says Kino, the W.M. Keck
Foundation Professor of Electrical Engineering, Emeritus.
``Normally we use lenses to focus, but it`s not possible
to resolve detail in objects smaller than one-half
the wavelength of light.``
Because the shortest wavelength of visible light
is 400 nanometers, a conventional microscope cannot
resolve objects 200 nanometers or smaller. ``But
the bowtie antenna produces an optical spot that`s
20-nanometers wide, so we`re improving the resolution
by a factor of 10,`` Kino says.
Polymers and sensors
In addition to nano-scale optical imaging, Moerner
says that bowties may be useful in photopolymerization,
a process that uses light to create synthetic compounds
(polymers), which researchers can use to trap nano-particles
and place them in specific locations. ``It`s difficult
to put molecules and crystals exactly where you want
them when you`re working at a nano-scale,`` Schuck
explains.
Bowties also may have applications in Raman spectroscopy,
a technique that allows scientists to identify individual
molecules by measuring the vibrational energy the
molecule emits when exposed to light. ``It`s analogous
to fingerprinting,`` Schuck explains. ``Each molecule
has a unique vibrational energy, and bowties have
a potential use as biological or chemical sensors
that can differentiate molecules.``
The Stanford team plans to explore these and other
practical applications of bowtie nanoantennas in
future experiments. On Aug. 30, Moerner will discuss
bowties and other developments in the field of nanophotonics
at the annual meeting of the American Chemical Society
in Washington, D.C.
CONTACT:
Mark Shwartz, News Service: (650) 723-9296, mshwartz@stanford.edu
COMMENT:
W.E. Moerner, Department of Chemistry: (650) 723-1727,
wmoerner@stanford.edu
Jim Schuck, Department of Chemistry: (650) 724-4052,
pjschuck@stanford.edu
RELEVANT WEB URLS:
MOERNER LAB
http://www.stanford.edu/group/moerner
STANFORD NANOFABRICATION FACILITY
http://snf.stanford.edu
AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
http://www.chemistry.org
News Service website:
http://www.stanford.edu/news/
Stanford Report (university newspaper):
http://news.stanford.edu
Most recent news releases from Stanford:
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/news/html/releases.html
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