Artificial materials imitate nature's own.Nature has a knack for making materials. Bones and teeth, for instance, display extraordinary properties-high strength, light weight, and unusual molecular architecture-that scientists find hard to replicate. Even more remarkable is the ability of biologi cal processes to assemble these complex composites from inorganic materials. Using a process of molecular self-assembly Molecular self-assembly is the assembly of molecules without guidance or management from an outside source.There are two types of self-assembly, intramolecular self-assembly and intermolecular self-assembly. inspired by the way bones form, chemists Peter T. Tanev and Thomas J. Pinnavaia of Michigan State University Michigan State University, at East Lansing; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1855. It opened in 1857 as Michigan Agricultural College, the first state agricultural college. in East Lansing East Lansing, city (1990 pop. 50,677), Ingham co., S central Mich., a suburb of Lansing, on the Red Cedar River; inc. 1907. The city was first known as College Park, but was renamed when it was incorporated. have managed to coax a silicon compound into forming tiny onionlike beads, called vesic les, that are layered in concentric shells. "We're aiming to mimic the way nature puts together organic and inorganic components, as in teeth and bones," says Pinnavaia. "By using a biological type of assembly, we've been able to make a new type of porous material." The newly fabricated material resembles zeolites, naturally occurring mineral compounds that serve as catalysts for a wide range of reactions. Scientists want to customize such materials, tailoring the size and shape of their pores to specific chemical pu rposes. "Materials that have holes as part of their structure, such as zeolites, play an important role in commercial processes, particularly in refining petroleum and in reducing industrial pollutants," Pinnavaia says. "The chemistry of assembly of these porous silica vesicles resembles what goes on during biomineralization." The new vesicles-which form clusters resembling a bunch of grapes-measure between one-millionth and one-billionth of a meter in diameter, the chemists report in the March 1 Science. Tests show that this silica remains stable at a wide range of temperatures, has a large surface area and pore volume, and can be produced using methods that are environmentally benign, the chemists say. "The ability to make complex self-assembled materials like this is a significant advance," says Thomas Bein, a chemist at Purdue University Purdue University (pərdy `, -d `), main campus at West Lafayette, Ind. in West Lafayette, Ind. "This is one of the first examples of an organized, porous material with a vesicle vesicle /ves·i·cle/ (ves´i-k'l) 1. a small bladder or sac containing liquid. 2. a small circumscribed elevation of the epidermis containing a serous fluid; a small blister. structure," says Galen D. Stucky Galen D. Stucky is a world renowned American inorganic materials chemist most famous for his work with porous ordered mesoporous materials such as SBA-15. He has been ranked in the top five most cited materials scientist in the world according to Thomson Scientific's in-cites publication , a chemist at the University of California, Santa Barbara History The predecessor to UCSB, Santa Barbara State College, focused on teacher training, industrial arts, home economics, and foreign languages. Intense lobbying by an interest group in the City of Santa Barbara led by Thomas Storke and Pearl Chase persuaded the State . "That's an important contribution." With further development, such biomimetic materials hold the promise of spawning improved building materials, novel protective coatings, and components for automobiles and microelectronics. |
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