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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
March
Mechanics
meets chemistry in new ways to manipulate matter
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
Released
3/21/07
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Graphic
by Ashley Levato |
| An
overlay of images at successive stages of force-induced
chemical change. The blue image is the start of
the reaction. The yellow image represents the end
of the reaction. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
The inventors of self-healing plastic have come up with another invention:
a new way of doing chemistry.
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have
found a novel way to manipulate matter and drive chemical reactions
along a desired direction. The new technique utilizes mechanical force
to alter the course of chemical reactions and yield products not obtainable
through conventional conditions.
Potential applications include materials that more readily repair themselves,
or clearly indicate when they have been damaged.
“This is a fundamentally new way of doing chemistry,” said Jeffrey
Moore, a William H. and Janet
Lycan Professor of Chemistry at Illinois and corresponding author of a
paper that describes the technique in the March 22 issue of the journal Nature.
“By harnessing
mechanical energy, we can go into molecules and pull on specific
bonds to drive desired reactions,” said Moore, who also is
a researcher at the Frederick
Seitz Materials Laboratory on campus and at the university’s Beckman
Institute for Advanced Science and Technology.
The directionally specific nature of mechanical force makes this approach
to reaction control fundamentally different from the usual chemical
and physical constraints.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
Nancy
Sottos, professor of materials science; Scott
White, professor of aerospace engineering, center;
and Jeffrey Moore, professor of chemistry, have
collaborated again. The inventors of self-healing
plastic have come up with another invention:
a new way of doing chemistry. |
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To demonstrate
the technique, Moore and colleagues placed a mechanically active
molecule – called a mechanophore – at the center of a
long polymer chain. The polymer chain was then stretched in opposite
directions by a flow field created by the collapse of cavitating
bubbles produced by ultrasound, subjecting the mechanophore to a
mechanical tug of war.
“We created a situation where a chemical reaction could go down one of
two pathways,” Moore said. “By applying force to the mechanophore,
we could bias which of those pathways the reaction chose to follow.”
One potential application of the technique is as a trigger to divert
mechanical energy stored in stressed polymers into chemical pathways
such as self-healing reactions.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Graphic
by Benjamin Grosser, Imaging Technology Group,
Beckman Institute |
| For
most chemical reactions to proceed the reactants
need to surmount an energy barrier. The energy
required is usually provided as heat, light, pressure
or electrical potential. Now mechanical force can
be added to that list - to the surprise of many
a chemist. A reaction can literally be given a
shove. |
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In the original
self-healing concept, microcapsules of healing agent are ruptured
when a crack forms in the material. Capillary action then transports
the healing agent to the crack, where it mixes with a chemical catalyst,
and polymerization takes place.
With new mechanical triggers, however, mechanical energy would initiate
the polymerization directly, thereby skipping many steps. The cross-linking
of neighboring chains would prevent further propagation of a crack
and avoid additional damage.
“We have demonstrated that it is now possible to use mechanical force
to steer chemical reactions along pathways that are unattainable by conventional
means,” Moore said. “We look forward to developing additional mechanophores
whose chemical reactivity will be activated by external force.”
The other authors of the paper besides Moore are graduate student and
lead author Charles Hickenboth, aerospace
engineering professor Scott White, materials
science and engineering professor Nancy Sottos, and research chemists
Scott Wilson and Jerome Baudry. White, Sottos and Moore co-invented
self-healing plastic.
The work was supported by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research
and the Petroleum Research Fund.
Editor’s note: To reach Jeffrey Moore, call 217-244-4024; e-mail: jsmoore@uiuc.edu.
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