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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
March
Super
small nanoelectrodes can probe microscale environments
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
Released
3/9/07
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Investigating the composition and behavior of microscale environments,
including those within living cells, could become easier and more
precise with nanoelectrodes being developed at the University of Illinois.
“The individual nanotube-based probes can be used for electrochemical
and biochemical sensing,” said Min-Feng Yu, a U. of I. professor
of mechanical science and engineering,
and a researcher at the university’s Beckman
Institute. “The position of the nanoelectrodes can be controlled
very accurately.”
To fabricate the nanoelectrodes, Yu and graduate students Kyungsuk Yum,
Jie Hu and Han Na Cho begin by attaching a strong, rigid, boron-nitride
nanotube to a much larger, conductive probe. The nanotube will form
the insulating core of the nanoelectrode.
The researchers then coat the nanotube with a thin film of gold about
10-50 nanometers thick (a nanometer is 1 billionth of a meter.) The
gold layer is then coated with an insulating polymer coating about 10
nanometers thick. Lastly, the researchers use a focused ion beam to
slice off the end of the nanotube, exposing a conducting ring of gold
sandwiched between an insulating core and an insulating outer ring.
The process yields nanoelectrodes with a diameter of 100 nanometers,
and a length of up to 30 microns.
Because the nanotube is attached to a much larger probe, the researchers
can manipulate the nanotube like a needle. They can control precisely
where the nanotube penetrates a cell, for example, and even pinpoint
smaller cell structures, such as the nucleus or mitochondrion.
“Nanoelectrodes offer new opportunities for electrochemical sensing
in intracellular environments,” said Yu, who will describe the
fabrication process and demonstrate the feasibility of nanoelectrodes
at the March meeting of the American Physical Society, to be held in
Denver, March 5-9. “By functionalizing the active area of the
nanoelectrode with an appropriate chemical, we can target the detection
of specific chemical species.”
The researchers have demonstrated that their nanoelectrode can sense
the chemical environment within a droplet 10 microns in diameter. Their
next step is to show that the probe can penetrate the cellular membrane
of a living cell, without damaging the cell.
The National Science Foundation and the University of Illinois funded
the work.
Editor’s note: To reach Min-Feng Yu, call 217-333-9246; e-mail:
mfyu@uiuc.edu.
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