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Physicists Build World's Smallest Motor Using Nanotubes And Etched Silicon
Science Daily ^ | 7/24/03

Posted on 07/24/2003 2:00:32 PM PDT by LibWhacker

BERKELEY – Only 15 years after University of California, Berkeley, engineers built the first micro-scale motor, a UC Berkeley physicist has created the first nano-scale motor - a gold rotor on a nanotube shaft that could ride on the back of a virus.

"It's the smallest synthetic motor that's ever been made," said Alex Zettl, professor of physics at UC Berkeley and faculty scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. "Nature is still a little bit ahead of us - there are biological motors that are equal or slightly smaller in size - but we are catching up."

Zettl and his UC Berkeley graduate students and post-docs report their feat in the July 24 issue of Nature.

The electrostatic motors represent a milestone in nanotechnology, and prove that nanotubes and other nanostructures several hundred times smaller than the diameter of a human hair can be manipulated and assembled into true devices.

Zettl and other scientists had previously made transistors from nanotubes, but this device is different, he said.

"It's the first device where you can put external wires on it and have something rotating, something you can control," he said. "We are pushing a lot of different technologies to the edge."

Such motors could have numerous uses, Zettl said. Because the rotor can be positioned at any angle, the motor could be used in optical circuits to redirect light, a process called optical switching. The rotor could be rapidly flipped back and forth to create a microwave oscillator, or the spinning rotor could be used to mix liquids in microfluidic devices.

The motor is about 500 nanometers across, 300 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair. While the part that rotates, the rotor, is between 100 and 300 nanometers long, the carbon nanotube shaft to which it is attached is only a few atoms across, perhaps 5-10 nanometers thick.

In 1988, UC Berkeley electrical engineering professor Richard Muller and colleagues in the Berkeley Sensor & Actuator Center (BSAC) fabricated from silicon the world's first operating micromotor. Their electrostatic motor was 100 microns across, or about the width of a human hair.

While the microelectromechanical system (MEMS) motor still awaits appreciable industrial application, Muller said, other actuated MEMS devices have become commonplace. MEMS accelerometers, in part based on micromachining technology developed in BSAC, are now used in almost all automobile airbag deployment systems and in many heart pacemakers. MEMS micromirror arrays are vying with liquid-crystal arrays in state-of-the-art display projectors.

"Even at the time of its invention, the micromotor was more a demonstration that designers had the sophistication to produce actuated mechanisms of micrometer size," said Muller, now a Professor in the Graduate School at UC Berkeley. "Similarly, Professor Zettl's achievement demonstrates controlled nanometer actuation, which opens a new realm for controlled manipulations. Right now, some applications appear to be significant for interactions with similarly sized biological specimens, and that's very exciting."

"Rich Muller has been a true inspiration for us. He did a fantastic thing," Zettl said. "When I look at his original motor, it's a work of art, it's very beautiful. But it looks huge to me now.

"We are trying to use some of the pioneering ideas that he and his collaborators had back then, but clearly this is a new phenomenon."

One unexpected difficulty, for example, is that the techniques for measuring the motor's speed are as yet too crude. The team's scanning electron microscope (SEM) can take pictures every 33 milliseconds and no faster, so they can't tell whether the rotor spins or flips faster than 30 times per second.

"We assume you could go much, much faster than that, probably to microwave frequencies," Zettl said. "There's no way we can detect that right now, but in principle the motor should be able to run that fast."

Microwave frequencies, common in communication networks, are above a billion cycles per second, in the gigahertz frequency range.

The motor's shaft is a multiwalled nanotube, that is, it consists of nested nanotubes much like the layers of a leek. Annealed both to the rotor and fixed anchors, the rigid nanotube allows the rotor to move only about 20 degrees. However, the team was able to break the outer wall of the nested nanotubes to allow the outer tube and attached rotor to freely spin around the inner tubes as a nearly frictionless bearing.

To build the motor, Zettl and his team made a slew of multiwalled nanotubes in an electric arc and deposited them on the flat silicon oxide surface of a silicon wafer. They then identified the best from the pile with an atomic force microscope, a device capable of picking up single atoms.

A gold rotor, nanotube anchors and opposing stators were then simultaneously patterned around the chosen nanotubes using electron beam lithography. A third stator was already buried under the silicon oxide surface. The rotor was annealed to the nanotubes and then the surface selectively etched to provide sufficient clearance for the rotor.

When the stators were charged with up to 50 volts of direct current, the gold rotor deflected up to 20 degrees, which was visible in the SEM. With alternating voltage, the rotor rocked back and forth, acting as a torsional oscillator. Such an oscillator, probably capable of microwave frequency oscillations from hundreds of megahertz to gigahertz, could be useful in many types of devices - in particular, communications devices such as cell phones or computers.

With a strong electrical jolt to the stators, the team was able to jerk the rotor and break the outer wall of the nested nanotubes, allowing the rotor to spin freely on the nested nanotube bearings. Zettl had made similar bearings several years ago, but this was the first time he had put them to use.

"The real breakthrough came a couple of years ago, when we discovered a method for peeling shells off multiwalled nanotubes and grabbing the core with a homemade nano-manipulator operating inside a transmission electron microscope (TEM)," Zettl said. "We showed that you could pull out the cores and they really did slide, they really did behave as a bearing. That technological leap allowed us to go full bore on the motor and really have confidence we could make it in the laboratory."

Interestingly, the rotor does not continue spinning for long once the electricity is turned off. It is so small that it has little inertia, so any tiny electric charges remaining on the device after it's turned off tend to stop the rotor immediately.

"The nanoworld is weird - different things dominate," Zettl said. "Gravity plays no role whatsoever and inertial effects are basically nonexistent because things are just so small, so that little things like residual electric fields can play a dominant role. It's counter intuitive."

Zettl expects to be able to reduce the size even further, perhaps by a factor of five. For the moment, though, he and his team are trying to make basic quantum measurements, such as the conductance through the nanotubes and the amount of friction in the bearings.

"There are many very fundamental questions we are trying to answer," he said. "The flip side is, we've got this incredibly neat little motor that's smaller than any other electric motor - let's try to integrate it into some larger architecture where people are making microelectromechanical devices or nanoelectromechnical devices. People will build on this."

Zettl's collaborators on the paper are graduate students A. M. Fennimore, T. D. Yuzvinsky and John Cumings and post-docs Wei-Qiang Han and M. S Fuhrer. Fuhrer now is with the Department of Physics at the University of Maryland, College Park. Cumings is now with the Department of Physics at Stanford University.

The work is supported by the National Science Foundation and the Office of Energy Research of the U.S. Department of Energy.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: motor; nanotubes; physicists; smallest
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1 posted on 07/24/2003 2:00:32 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker
Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.
2 posted on 07/24/2003 2:10:54 PM PDT by Sgt_Schultze
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To: LibWhacker; Gophack
Honey??? Have you seen my new nano-motor?
3 posted on 07/24/2003 2:13:02 PM PDT by ElkGroveDan (Fighting for Freedom and Having Fun)
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To: LibWhacker
Or, it could be used to whip up really tiny milkshakes. Portion control a la the Center For Science In The Public Interest.

Michael

4 posted on 07/24/2003 2:15:25 PM PDT by Wright is right! (Have a profitable day!)
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To: LibWhacker
Damn, now I'm going to get more eMails telling me how my anatomy can be enhanced, this time with nanotubes. Curses...
5 posted on 07/24/2003 2:15:40 PM PDT by DoughtyOne
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To: LibWhacker
Eventually they will have an entire civilization nano-ized to fit on the head of a pin and the nano-citizens will drive in nano-SUVs to nano-polling places to elect their nano-president every nano-year.
6 posted on 07/24/2003 2:16:09 PM PDT by RightWhale (Destroy the dark; restore the light)
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To: ElkGroveDan
"Honey??? Have you seen my new nano-motor?

It's great on gas but the leg room is lousy.

7 posted on 07/24/2003 2:16:40 PM PDT by SouthParkRepublican
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To: LibWhacker
the spinning rotor could be used to mix liquids in microfluidic devices.

I really recommend steering clear of fluidic space


8 posted on 07/24/2003 2:19:03 PM PDT by ElkGroveDan (Fighting for Freedom and Having Fun)
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To: LibWhacker
This may be a stupid question, but, since it's a motor and has moving parts, I'm assuming this thing can break down. How do you fix it if it does?
9 posted on 07/24/2003 2:20:08 PM PDT by Future Snake Eater (Where's the money, Lebowski?)
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To: Future Snake Eater
If they ever make a lib robot this motor can power its brain.
10 posted on 07/24/2003 2:23:33 PM PDT by Uncle George
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To: Future Snake Eater
If they ever make a lib robot this motor can power its brain.
11 posted on 07/24/2003 2:23:47 PM PDT by Uncle George
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To: Future Snake Eater
Tiny mechanic!
12 posted on 07/24/2003 2:23:49 PM PDT by verity
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach; sourcery
ping
13 posted on 07/24/2003 2:24:23 PM PDT by Libertarianize the GOP (Ideas have consequences)
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To: Future Snake Eater
Tiny mechanic!
14 posted on 07/24/2003 2:25:35 PM PDT by verity
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To: LibWhacker
Maybe it's just me, but reading about nanotechnology just bores the heck out of me.
15 posted on 07/24/2003 2:25:49 PM PDT by Last Dakotan
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To: LibWhacker
a UC Berkeley physicist has created the first nano-scale motor - a gold rotor on a nanotube shaft that could ride on the back of a virus.

Big deal. I once shot a man in Reno just to watch him die.

16 posted on 07/24/2003 2:28:03 PM PDT by TomServo ("Krakatoa: East of Java." "Fentonville: East of Muncie.")
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To: LibWhacker
The motor is about 500 nanometers across, 300 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair.

But by the time you put dual exhausts, an 850cfm Holley, and an NO2 kit, it will be substantially bigger.

17 posted on 07/24/2003 2:28:47 PM PDT by spodefly (This is my tagline. There are many like it, but this one is mine.)
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To: Future Snake Eater
Not a stupid question at all. It's a big problem. I've read MEMS devices tend to get gummed up all the time. Suffice it to say that serious widespread applications of this technology are WAY out in the future, imo.
18 posted on 07/24/2003 2:29:02 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: Future Snake Eater
This may be a stupid question, but, since it's a motor and has moving parts, I'm assuming this thing can break down. How do you fix it if it does?

Craftsman Nano-Tools!

19 posted on 07/24/2003 2:29:50 PM PDT by spodefly (This is my tagline. There are many like it, but this one is mine.)
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To: LibWhacker
Nanotubes will make silicon go the way of the vacuum tube. Invest now, avoid the rush later.
20 posted on 07/24/2003 2:30:04 PM PDT by Straight Vermonter (...they led my people astray, saying, "Peace!" when there was no peace -- Ezekiel 13:10)
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