RSC Publishing


Publishing

 

Cover image for Highlights in Chemical Science

Highlights in Chemical Science

News from across RSC Publishing.



Nanomotors go fuel-free


09 February 2010

Scientists in the US have developed nanomotors that are propelled through liquids using an electric field. 

Nanomotors are nano-sized machines that convert energy into motion and have a number of potential biomedical applications, including drug delivery and microsurgery. Catalytic nanowires, constructed with ends made from different metals, are one of the most studied varieties of synthetic nanomotor but they require a chemical fuel such as hydrogen peroxide to power them. Now Joseph Wang at the University of California, San Diego, has developed nanowire motors that don't require additional chemicals. 

The polypyrrole-cadmium nanowires contain a diode, which allows an electric current to flow in only one direction. When an alternating current electric field is applied to the nanowires, the electrical energy is converted into movement, propelling them a distance equivalent to seven times their body length in one second. 

Fuel-free nanomotors are preferable for biomedical applications as they do not require additional chemicals, explains Wang, which inspired his team to look for a new propulsion method. 'We have been working on synthetic nanomotors over the past three years, exploring new designs with enhanced speed and force and alternate propulsion principles that will enhance their performance,' he says. 

José Pingarrón, an expert on nanomotors from the Complutense University of Madrid, Spain, views the work as 'an important contribution to the field of nanomachines', saying that it shows nicely the possibility of controlling nanowire propulsion using an electrical field. 

Wang and colleagues are now turning their attention to testing their diode nanomotors in a biomedical environment. 

Hilary Burch 

Enjoy this story? Spread the word using the 'tools' menu on the left or add a comment to the Chemistry World blog. 



Link to journal article

Propulsion of nanowire diodes
Percy Calvo-Marzal, Sirilak Sattayasamitsathit, Shankar Balasubramanian, Joshua R. Windmiller, Cuong Dao and Joseph Wang, Chem. Commun., 2010, 46, 1623
DOI: 10.1039/b925568k

Also of interest

Tiny pushes from a distance

A microelectrode can remotely control the movement of a nanomotor

Nanomotors detect trace silver

Synthetic nanomotors could be used as detectors for trace levels of contaminants as researchers find they accelerate near silver ions