. Medical and Hospital News .




.
NANO TECH
Graphene quantum dots: The next big small thing
by Staff Writers
Houston TX (SPX) Jan 16, 2012

This transmission electron microscope image shows a graphene quantum dot with zigzag edges. The quantum dots can be created in bulk from carbon fiber through a chemical process discovered at Rice University. (Credit: Ajayan Lab/Rice University)

A Rice University laboratory has found a way to turn common carbon fiber into graphene quantum dots, tiny specks of matter with properties expected to prove useful in electronic, optical and biomedical applications.

The Rice lab of materials scientist Pulickel Ajayan, in collaboration with colleagues in China, India, Japan and the Texas Medical Center, discovered a one-step chemical process that is markedly simpler than established techniques for making graphene quantum dots. The results were published online this month in the American Chemical Society's journal Nano Letters.

"There have been several attempts to make graphene-based quantum dots with specific electronic and luminescent properties using chemical breakdown or e-beam lithography of graphene layers," said Ajayan, Rice's Benjamin M. and Mary Greenwood Anderson Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science and of Chemistry.

"We thought that as these nanodomains of graphitized carbons already exist in carbon fibers, which are cheap and plenty, why not use them as the precursor?"

Quantum dots, discovered in the 1980s, are semiconductors that contain a size- and shape-dependent band gap. These have been promising structures for applications that range from computers, LEDs, solar cells and lasers to medical imaging devices. The sub-5 nanometer carbon-based quantum dots produced in bulk through the wet chemical process discovered at Rice are highly soluble, and their size can be controlled via the temperature at which they're created.

The Rice researchers were attempting another experiment when they came across the technique.

"We tried to selectively oxidize carbon fiber, and we found that was really hard," said Wei Gao, a Rice graduate student who worked on the project with lead author Juan Peng, a visiting student from Nanjing University who studied in Ajayan's lab last year. "We ended up with a solution and decided to look at a few drops with a transmission electron microscope."

The specks they saw were bits of graphene or, more precisely, oxidized nanodomains of graphene extracted via chemical treatment of carbon fiber. "That was a complete surprise," Gao said.

"We call them quantum dots, but they're two-dimensional, so what we really have here are graphene quantum discs." Gao said other techniques are expensive and take weeks to make small batches of graphene quantum dots. "Our starting material is cheap, commercially available carbon fiber. In a one-step treatment, we get a large amount of quantum dots. I think that's the biggest advantage of our work," she said.

Further experimentation revealed interesting bits of information: The size of the dots, and thus their photoluminescent properties, could be controlled through processing at relatively low temperatures, from 80 to 120 degrees Celsius. "At 120, 100 and 80 degrees, we got blue, green and yellow luminescing dots," she said.

They also found the dots' edges tended to prefer the form known as zigzag. The edge of a sheet of graphene - the single-atom-thick form of carbon - determines its electrical characteristics, and zigzags are semiconducting.

Their luminescent properties give graphene quantum dots potential for imaging, protein analysis, cell tracking and other biomedical applications, Gao said. Tests at Houston's MD Anderson Cancer Center and Baylor College of Medicine on two human breast cancer lines showed the dots easily found their way into the cells' cytoplasm and did not interfere with their proliferation.

"The green quantum dots yielded a very good image," said co-author Rebeca Romero Aburto, a graduate student in the Ajayan Lab who also studies at MD Anderson. "The advantage of graphene dots over fluorophores is that their fluorescence is more stable and they don't photobleach. They don't lose their fluorescence as easily. They have a depth limit, so they may be good for in vitro and in vivo (small animal) studies, but perhaps not optimal for deep tissues in humans.

"But everything has to start in the lab, and these could be an interesting approach to further explore for bioimaging," Romero Alburto said. "In the future, these graphene quantum dots could have high impact because they can be conjugated with other entities for sensing applications, too."

Co-authors include Angel Marti, assistant professor of chemistry and bioengineering, postdoctoral research associates Zheng Liu and Liehui Ge, senior research scientist Lawrence Alemany and graduate student Xiaobo Zhan, all of Rice; Rice alumnus Li Song of Shinshu University, Japan; Bipin Kumar Gupta of the National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi, India, who worked at the Ajayan Lab on an Indo-US Science and Technology Forum fellowship; Guanhui Gao of the Ocean University of China; research technician Sajna Antony Vithayathil of Baylor College of Medicine; Benny Abraham Kaipparettu, a postdoctoral researcher at Baylor College of Medicine; Takuya Hayashi, an associate professor of engineering at Shinshu University, Japan; and Jun-Jie Zhu, a professor of chemistry at Nanjing University. Read the abstract here.

Related Links
Rice University
Nano Technology News From SpaceMart.com
Computer Chip Architecture, Technology and Manufacture




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



NANO TECH
Quick-Cooking Nanomaterials Make Tomorrow's Solid-State Air Conditioners and Refrigerators
Troy NY (SPX) Jan 13, 2012
Engineering researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have developed a new method for creating advanced nanomaterials that could lead to highly efficient refrigerators and cooling systems requiring no refrigerants and no moving parts. The key ingredients for this innovation are a dash of nanoscale sulfur and a normal, everyday microwave oven. At the heart of these solid-state cooling ... read more


NANO TECH
Japan disaster builds international bridges

Still in ruins: Haiti marks two years after quake

Still in ruins: Haiti marks two years after quake

Why is Haiti taking so long to recover?

NANO TECH
First Galileo satellite GIOVE-A outlives design life to reach sixth anniversary

USAF Awards Contract to Lockheed Martin for GPS III Launch and Checkout Capability

ORBCOMM Announces Launch of VesselSat2

Association of Old Crows Recognizes the Dangers of Persistent GPS Interference

NANO TECH
Evolution is written all over your face

Fusion plasma research helps neurologists to hear above the noise

Outrage over Indian islands 'human zoo' video

To Speed People Up, Human Leg Muscle Slows Down

NANO TECH
S.Africa boosts efforts to protect Kruger rhinos

Chinese arrive in France

LSU professor discovers world's tiniest vertebrate

Early primate had a transitional lemur-like grooming claw

NANO TECH
WHO lauds India's year without polio

Balkan countries join forces to fight HIV/AIDS stigma

Vietnam culls over 2,500 chickens in bird flu fight

Hong Kong probes deadly bug at government offices

NANO TECH
Chinese Premier Wen pledges $140m for Nepal

Tibetan attempts self-immolation in China: rights groups

China's Tibetan Buddhists 'in vicious cycle'

Chinese dissident flees to US

NANO TECH
NATO warship assists Iranian vessel

China says shots fired at cargo boat on Mekong

Spanish navy repels pirate attack in Indian ocean: ministry

US rescues six more Iranians despite tensions

NANO TECH
China's economic growth slows to 9.2% in 2011

Walker's World: A new social contract

Outside View: Rating downgrades

EU faces downgrades as debt talks stall


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement