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SAN
JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 14, 2004--IBM
scientists have achieved a breakthrough in nanoscale
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) by directly detecting
the faint magnetic signal from a single electron buried
inside a solid sample.
This achievement is a major milestone toward creating
a microscope that can make three-dimensional images
of molecules with atomic resolution. Success in this
quest should have major impact on the study of materials
-- ranging from proteins and pharmaceuticals to integrated
circuits and industrial catalysts -- for which a detailed
understanding of the atomic structure is essential.
Knowing the exact location of specific atoms within
tiny nanoelectronic structures, for example, would
enhance designers' insight into their manufacture
and performance. The ability to directly image the
detailed atomic structure of proteins would aid the
development of new drugs.
"Throughout history, the ability to see matter
more clearly has always enabled important new discoveries
and insights," says Daniel Rugar, manager of
nanoscale studies at IBM's Almaden Research Center
in San Jose, California. "This new capability
should ultimately lead to fundamental advancements
in nanotechnology and biology."
Rugar leads the team of scientists who for more than
a decade have been making pioneering advancements
in the nanoscale MRI method called magnetic resonance
force microscopy (MRFM). His team has improved MRI
sensitivity by some 10 million times compared to the
medical MRI devices used to visualize organs in the
human body. The improved sensitivity extends MRI into
the nanometer realm. (A nanometer is a billionth of
a meter, the length spanned by about 5-10 atoms.)
IBM Research has a distinguished history in developing
microscopes for nanoscale imaging and science. Gerd
Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer of IBM's Zurich Research
Laboratory received the 1986 Nobel Prize in Physics
for their invention of the scanning tunneling microscope,
which can image individual atoms on electrically conducting
surfaces. Binnig later invented the atomic force microscope
(AFM), which used the attraction between a cantilever
and surface features on non-conducting surfaces. Scientists
at IBM and elsewhere modified and extended the AFM
design to image surface forces such as magnetism,
friction and electrostatic attraction with nanometer
resolution. MRFM combines concepts from both AFM and
MRI to allow nanometer resolution of features up to
100 nanometers deep inside a sample.
The IBM team of Rugar, John Mamin, Raffi Budakian
and Benjamain Chui published its single-electron results
in the July 15 issue of the scientific journal Nature.
This research is funded in part by the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency.
Technical details
The central feature of an MRFM is a microscopic silicon
"microcantilever" that looks like a miniature
diving board 1,000 times thinner than a human hair.
It vibrates at a frequency of about 5,000 times a
second, and attached to the cantilever tip is a tiny
but powerful magnetic particle.
Isolated ("unpaired") electrons and many
atomic nuclei behave like tiny bar magnets. These
fundamental units of magnetism are often called "spins."
Just as two bar magnets can attract or repel each
another, the MRFM's magnetic tip is attracted or repelled
by the spins in the sample. By tuning an oscillating
high-frequency magnetic field to the natural precession
frequency of the spin being imaged, its magnetic orientation
flips back and forth as the cantilever vibrates. Although
the magnetic force between the magnetic tip and the
spin is exceedingly small (less than a millionth of
a trillionth of a pound), the cantilever is so sensitive
that the flipping of the spin causes a detectable
change in the cantilever's vibration frequency.
While medical MRI looks at groups of at least 1 trillion
proton spins, the IBM researchers have just detected
the much fainter signal of a single electron spin.
The researchers also demonstrated rudimentary (one-dimensional)
imaging with 25-nanometer resolution, about 40 times
better than the best conventional MRI-based microscopes.
Rugar's future research is aimed at further improving
the sensitivity, resolution and speed of the MRFM
technique so it can detect single protons and other
nuclei, such as carbon-13, that can be used to reveal
molecular structures. (The magnetic signal of a single
electron is about 600 times stronger than that of
a single proton.)
Applying MRFM to protein structures would be particularly
far-reaching. The biological activity of a large protein
molecule is determined by its intricately folded atomic
configuration. But since such a structure is currently
impossible to determine directly, scientists must
use indirect methods such as the scattering of x-rays
by crystallized proteins, or computer simulations.
Advanced MRFMs may also be able to serve as detectors
of quantum information in future spin-based quantum
computers. Contacts
IBM Research, Almaden Research Center
Mike Ross, Media Relations Project Manager
Voice: 408-927-1283; Fax: 408-927-3011
E-mail: mikeross@almaden.ibm.com
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