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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
March
Light-sensitive particles
change chemistry at the flick of a switch
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
3/27/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Jeffrey
Moore, a William H. and Janet Lycan Professor of Chemistry,
and Jennifer Lewis, the Thurnauer Professor of Materials
Science and Engineering, have developed a light-sensitive,
self-assembled monolayer that provides unique control
over particle interactions. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— A light-sensitive, self-assembled monolayer that provides unique
control over particle interactions has been developed by scientists
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Particles coated
with the monolayer change their surface charge and chemistry upon exposure
to ultraviolet light.
“Tailoring interactions between particles allows us to design
colloidal fluids, gels and crystals for use as ceramic, photonic and
pharmaceutical materials,” said Jeffrey Moore, a William H. and
Janet Lycan Professor of Chemistry
and a researcher at the Frederick
Seitz Materials Research Laboratory and at the Beckman
Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. “We are assembling
a toolkit of molecules that can be incorporated as monolayers on particles
to achieve desired effects.”
Light-induced modification of colloidal interactions provides an ’extra
handle’ for tailoring system behavior, said Jennifer Lewis, the
Thurnauer Professor of Materials
Science and Engineering and interim director of the Frederick Seitz
Materials Research Laboratory.
“The monolayer is designed so that light triggers the cleavage
of a specific chemical bond, thereby exposing an underlying functional
group of interest,” said Lewis, who also is a professor of chemical
and biomolecular engineering and a researcher at the Beckman Institute.
Moore and Lewis first demonstrated the technique in a paper published
in the
Sept. 30, 2005, issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
In that work, the surface charge and, thus, the electrostatic interactions
between photosensitive silica microspheres, were modified by exposure
to ultraviolet light.
In recent work, the researchers documented the gel-to-fluid transition
in binary mixtures that initially were oppositely charged. “Exposure
to ultraviolet light rendered all of the particles negative and converted
the system into a colloidal fluid that settled to form a dense sediment,”
said Moore, who will present the team’s findings at the national
meeting of the American Chemical Society, to be held in Atlanta, March
26-30.
“These light-responsive systems will enable novel assembly routes
for creating colloidal structures in a variety of materials,”
Lewis said. “We are currently investigating the ability to locally
photo-pattern such assemblies in three dimensions without requiring
multiple processing steps.”
Light-sensitive colloidal particles could also be used to “tune”
the elastic properties, viscous response and microstructure of gel-based
inks used in the direct-write assembly of complex, three-dimensional
structures formed by robotic deposition.
The Moore group is developing multiple wavelength-specific triggers
that would allow different wavelengths of light to induce changes sequentially.
The U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation funded
the work.
Editor’s note:
To reach Jennifer Lewis, call 217-244-4973; e-mail: jalewis@uiuc.edu
To reach Jeffrey Moore, call 217-244-4024; e-mail: jsmoore@uiuc.edu
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