A University of Colorado at Boulder team has developed the first computer-generated
model of a tiny, waterwheel-like molecular rotor that has been harnessed to
rotate in one direction at different speeds in response to changes in the strength
of an electrical field applied from the outside.
The
synthetic molecule features a chemical axle with
two attached "paddles" carrying
opposite electrical charges, which is mounted parallel
to a gold substrate surface, said Professor Josef
Michl of CU-Boulder's chemistry and biochemistry
department. The researchers found that the microscopic
rotor -- constructed with a few hundred atoms --
will turn in a desired direction at a selected
frequency using an oscillating electrical field
concentrated in a tiny area above the molecule.
Such molecular rotors may someday function as nanotechnology
machines and be used as chemical sensors, cell-phone
switches, miniature pumps or even laser-blocking
goggles, he said. A paper by Michl and former CU-Boulder
postdoctoral student Dominik Horinek, the Feodr Lynen
Fellow of the German Humboldt Foundation, appeared
in the Oct. 4 issue of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
In
March 2004, the CU-Boulder research group led by
Michl reported the synthesis of these molecules
and their mounting on a gold surface -- the world's
first surface-mounted artificial molecular rotor,
which turned spontaneously in random directions
at room temperatures. While the team was able to
make the rotor "flip" using electricity, the new
computer model indicates such rotors can be harnessed
to turn in one, desired direction at varying, prescribed
speeds, he said.
"We are very pleased," said Michl. "The
computer model tells us we will be able to manipulate
the frequency of rotor revolutions by changing
the strength of the outside electrical field."
The researchers were able to make the new molecular
rotor model turn at three different speeds by adjusting
the electrical field strength at a given oscillation
frequency, he said. The behavior of the rotor responds
both to the imposed electrical field and frictional
drag within the gold substrate on which the device
is anchored, as well as the natural thermal movements
of molecules, known as Brownian motion.
The
molecular rotors designed and constructed by Michl
and his colleagues are an outgrowth of a "Molecular
Tinkertoy Kit" the group developed in the 1990s.
Made up of chemical rods and connectors tens of thousands
of times smaller than the width of a human hair,
the parts -- which are made primarily of carbon atoms--
have been used to assemble a variety of simple nanostructures
over the past decade.
Complex
molecular motors, including the protein, ATPase
-- which fuels most cellular processes in living
things -- are found throughout the natural world,
Michl said. "Ours is much more primitive and
one hundred times smaller, and is but a first step."
Michl's
group hopes to design a rotor with larger "paddles" and
to power it with either a liquid or gas fluid rather
than electricity. "Ultimately, we would like to use
light pulses to drive the rotor and make it pump
fluid. At that point we would have a motor, which
is something that actually does useful work, rather
than a rotor, which merely idles."
Michl
said modeling the behavior of molecular rotors
with powerful computers saves a significant amount
of time and money in the research process. "Modeling
allows us to discard designs that are not fruitful," he
said. "We can save a lot of labor and cost by modeling
them in the computer first, and only then synthesizing
them in the laboratory."
Michl is collaborating with several others in CU-Boulder's
chemistry and biochemistry department, including
research associates Thomas Magnera and Jaroslav Vacek
and graduate students Debra Casher and Mary Mulcahy.
He also works closely with Professors Charles Rogers
and John Price of the CU-Boulder physics department,
as well as faculty members at Northwestern University.
Funded primarily by the U.S. Army Research Office
and the National Science Foundation, the research
could lead to new technology to produce goggle coatings
that would shield human eyes from blinding lasers,
said Michl. Arrays of rotors laid down in a protective
coating would rest perpendicular to the goggle surface
and allow light through. But when a laser pulse arrived
at the goggles, the rotors would push the paddles
into a parallel position to block incoming light.
Michl is one of 19 CU-Boulder faculty members who
have been elected to the National Academy of Sciences,
which publishes the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences.
A movie animation/ still image, courtesy of PNAS/CU-Boulder,
is available at: http://www.pnas.org/content/vol0/issue2005/images/data/0506183102/DC1/06183Movie1.mpg
Contact: Josef Michl
michl@eefus.colorado.edu
303-492-6519
Jim Scott
303-492-3114
University of
Colorado at Boulder
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