145 research outputs found
Chiral templating of self-assembling nanostructures by circularly polarized light
PMCID: PMC4387888.-- et al.The high optical and chemical activity of nanoparticles (NPs) signifies the possibility of converting the spin angular momenta of photons into structural changes in matter. Here, we demonstrate that illumination of dispersions of racemic CdTe NPs with right- (left-)handed circularly polarized light (CPL) induces the formation of right- (left-)handed twisted nanoribbons with an enantiomeric excess exceeding 30%, which is â 1/410 times higher than that of typical CPL-induced reactions. Linearly polarized light or dark conditions led instead to straight nanoribbons. CPL templating of NP assemblies is based on the enantio-selective photoactivation of chiral NPs and clusters, followed by their photooxidation and self-assembly into nanoribbons with specific helicity as a result of chirality-sensitive interactions between the NPs. The ability of NPs to retain the polarization information of incident photons should open pathways for the synthesis of chiral photonic materials and allow a better understanding of the origins of biomolecular homochirality.This material is based on work partially supported by the Center for Solar and Thermal
Energy Conversion, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the US Department
of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under award number
#DE-SC0000957, and by ARO MURI W911NF-12-1-0407 ‘Coherent Effects in Hybrid
Nanostructures for Lineshape Engineering of Electromagnetic Media’ (N.A.K. and S.L.).
We acknowledge support from the NSF under grant ECS-0601345; CBET 0933384; CBET 0932823; and CBET 1036672. Financial support from the Robert A. Welch Foundation (C-1664) is also acknowledged (S.L.). Support from the NIH grant GM085043 (P.Z.) is gratefully acknowledged. The work of P.K. was supported by the NSF DMR grant No. 1309765 and by the ACS PRF grant No. 53062-ND6.Peer Reviewe
Virus-Templated Near-Amorphous Iron Oxide Nanotubes
© 2016 American Chemical Society. We present a simple synthesis of iron oxide nanotubes, grown under very mild conditions from a solution containing Fe(II) and Fe(III), on rod-shaped tobacco mosaic virus templates. Their well-defined shape and surface chemistry suggest that these robust bionanoparticles are a versatile platform for synthesis of small, thin mineral tubes, which was achieved efficiently. Various characterization tools were used to explore the iron oxide in detail: Electron microscopy (SEM, TEM), magnetometry (SQUID-VSM), diffraction (XRD, TEM-SAED), electron spectroscopies (EELS, EDX, XPS), and X-ray absorption (XANES with EXAFS analysis). They allowed determination of the structure, crystallinity, magnetic properties, and composition of the tubes. The protein surface of the viral templates was crucial to nucleate iron oxide, exhibiting analogies to biomineralization in natural compartments such as ferritin cages
Structure-Sensitive Mechanism of Nanographene Failure
The response of a nanographene sheet to external stresses is considered in
terms of a mechanochemical reaction. The quantum chemical realization of the
approach is based on a coordinate-of-reaction concept for the purpose of
introducing a mechanochemical internal coordinate (MIC) that specifies a
deformational mode. The related force of response is calculated as the energy
gradient along the MIC, while the atomic configuration is optimized over all of
the other coordinates under the MIC constant-pitch elongation. The approach is
applied to the benzene molecule and (5, 5) nanographene. A drastic anisotropy
in the microscopic behavior of both objects under elongation along a MIC has
been observed when the MIC is oriented either along or normally to the C-C
bonds chain. Both the anisotropy and high stiffness of the nanographene
originate at the response of the benzenoid unit to stress.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures 1 tabl
Direct imaging of structural disordering and heterogeneous dynamics of fullerene molecular liquid
Structural rearrangements govern the various properties of disordered systems and visualization of these dynamical processes can provide critical information on structural deformation and phase transformation of the systems. However, direct imaging of individual atoms or molecules in a disordered state is quite challenging. Here, we prepare a model molecular system of C70 molecules on graphene and directly visualize the structural and dynamical evolution using aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy. E-beam irradiation stimulates dynamics of fullerene molecules, which results in the first-order like structural transformation from the molecular crystal to molecular liquid. The real-time tracking of individual molecules using an automatic molecular identification process elucidates the relaxation behavior of a stretched exponential functional form. Moreover, the directly observed heterogeneous dynamics bear similarity to the dynamical heterogeneity in supercooled liquids near the glass transition. Fullerenes on graphene can serve as a new model system, which allows investigation of molecular dynamics in disordered phases
Carbon sp chains in graphene nanoholes
Nowadays sp carbon chains terminated by graphene or graphitic-like carbon are
synthesized routinely in several nanotech labs.
We propose an ab-initio study of such carbon-only materials, by computing
their structure and stability, as well as their electronic, vibrational and
magnetic properties.
We adopt a fair compromise of microscopic realism with a certain level of
idealization in the model configurations, and predict a number of properties
susceptible to comparison with experiment.Comment: 34 pages, 27 figure
Conducting linear chains of sulphur inside carbon nanotubes
Despite extensive research for more than 200 years, the experimental isolation of monatomic sulphur chains, which are believed to exhibit a conducting character, has eluded scientists. Here we report the synthesis of a previously unobserved composite material of elemental sulphur, consisting of monatomic chains stabilized in the constraining volume of a carbon nanotube. This one-dimensional phase is confirmed by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and synchrotron X-ray diffraction. Interestingly, these one-dimensional sulphur chains exhibit long domain sizes of up to 160 nm and high thermal stability (∼800 K). Synchrotron X-ray diffraction shows a sharp structural transition of the one-dimensional sulphur occurring at ∼450-650 K. Our observations, and corresponding electronic structure and quantum transport calculations, indicate the conducting character of the one-dimensional sulphur chains under ambient pressure. This is in stark contrast to bulk sulphur that needs ultrahigh pressures exceeding ∼90 GPa to become metallic
Magnetic structure of a single-crystal hcp electrodeposited cobalt nanowire
We report on the magnetic and structural properties of an individual 40 nm diameter magnetic nanowire, prepared by electrodeposition into anodic alumina templates. The high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and the X-ray diffraction reveal the monocrystalline hcp structure along the whole 10 μm nanowire length with the c-axis almost perpendicular to the nanowire axis. This observation allows the understanding of magnetic properties of the nanowire. The magnetic state observed by magnetic force microscopy and modelled by micromagnetic simulations is interpreted as consisting of tilted vortices with alternating chiralities
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