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Tip
Sheet: Science & Technology

Tip sheets highlight timely news and events at Washington University in St. Louis. For more information on any of the stories below or for assistance in arranging interviews, please see the contact information listed with each story. For comments on the Science & Technology news tips service, please contact the editor, Tony Fitzpatrick at (314) 935-5272 or tony_fitzpatrick@aismail.wustl.edu.
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Chemists
make first boron nanowhiskers;
'Little shavers' could prove key
in nanoelectronics

Media assistance:
Tony Fitzpatrick
- (314) 935-5272
Source: William
E. Buhro's Web page
- (314) 935-4269
Source: Record
story: Profile of William
E. Buhro
Related: View
information on other nanosystems
research teams

[St.
Louis, Mo., June 2002] - They're
cute little shavers, and they
could play a key role in the "small"
revolution about us.
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Chemistry graduate student Heng Yu
(right) and William E. Buhro, Ph.D.,
professor of chemistry in Arts & Sciences,
examine nanowire specimens in an inert-atmosphere
glove box, which stores moisture-
and oxygen-sensitive chemicals. The
glove box allows manipulation of sensitive
reagents and nanostructured materials
in a continuously scrubbed nitrogen
atmosphere. |
They're
boron nanowhiskers, the world's first such
crystalline nanowires, made by chemists
at Washington University in St. Louis.
Reporting in the May 1 issue of the Journal
of the American Chemical Society (JACS),
graduate student Carolyn Jones Otten, her
advisor William. E. Buhro, Ph.D., Washington
University professor of chemistry, and their
collaborators report that they have made
boron nanowhiskers by chemical vapor deposition.
The particles have diameters in the range
of 20 to 200 nanometers and the whiskers
(also called nanowires) are semiconducting
and show properties of elemental boron.
To get an idea of scale, one nanometer is
one one-thousandth of a micrometer; in comparison,
a strand of human hair is typically 50 to
100 micrometers thick.
In the nano-world, the carbon nanotube is
king, considered the particle most likely
to make new materials, and increasingly
valued as potential metallic conductors
in the burgeoning experimental world of
molecular electronics. However, carbon has
its limitations: its cell wall structure
and variable conductivity make it unreliable
as a conductor -- only one-third of those
grown have metallic characteristics; the
others are semiconductors. And one specific
type can't predictably be grown; instead,
a mix of types is grown together.
The Buhro group at Washington University
in St. Louis turned to boron, one spot to
the left of carbon in the periodic table,
to see if it would be a good candidate.
If nanotubes could be made of boron and
produced in large quantities, they should
have the advantage of having consistent
properties despite individual variation
in diameter and wall structure. The discovery
that the nanowhiskers are semiconducting
make them promising candidates for nanoscale
electronic wires.
"The theoretical papers predicted that boron
nanotubes may exist and if they do, should
have consistent electrical properties regardless
of their helicity. This would be a distinct
advantage over carbon nanotubes," said Otten.
"So, we set out to make these. We had already
done some work on boron nitride nanotubes,
which are similar in structure to carbon
nanotubes but they are electrically insulating.
So, we used a similar method to try to make
boron nanotubes. We grew things that looked
very promising -- long thin wire-like structures.
At first we thought they were hollow, but
after closer examination, we determined
that they were dense whiskers, not hollow
nanotubes."
The notion of boron nanotubes creates more
excitement in nanotechnology than nanowhiskers
because of their unique structure, which
could be likened to a distinct form of an
element. Carbon, for instance, is present
as graphite and diamond, and, recently discovered,
in "buckyball" and nanotube conformations.
Also, boron nanotubes are predicted by theory
to have very high conductivity, something
groups like Buhro's are eager to measure.
The nanowhiskers made by Buhro's group were
electrically characterized to see if they
were good conductors despite being whiskers
rather than tubes. They were found to exhibit
semiconducting behavior. However, bulk boron
can be "doped" with other atoms to increase
its conductivity. Otten, Buhro and their
collaborators are now working on trying
to do the same thing with boron nanowhiskers
to increase their conductivity. Carbon nanotubes
have been doped, as have various other kinds
of nanowires, and assembled in combinations
of conducting and semiconducting ones to
make for several different microscale electronic
components such as rectifiers, field-effect
transistors and diodes.
"Now we're trying to dope our boron nano-whiskers
to see if we can increase their conductivity,"
Otten said. "We would still be interested
in discovering boron nanotubes, but we're
just not quite sure how to make them."
Since the early 90s Buhro and his group
have been making many kinds of nanowires
and nanotubes that might ultimately be incorporated
into nanoelectronic devices. Nanowires and
nanotubes are receiving much current attention
as potential transistors, wires, and switches
for ultra-small circuits and devices to
be built from them on almost a molecular
scale.
"If you want to make electronics smaller
and smaller, you have to make the component
devices and the wires that interconnect
them smaller and smaller," Buhro said. "We
are trying to build the scientific infrastructure
for electronic nanotechnology, and to understand
the basic principles involved. We have to
find out how these nano-wires work and how
to connect them into circuits and functional
devices. Even when we have that, nobody
yet knows how a computer chip will be made
that uses these things. That is a wide-open,
unsolved problem. But the fundamental science
to be done is potentially important and
is going to be very fun."
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