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Material repels water on command. (Quick-Change Surface).


In an advance that could open new mutes to sensors, drug delivery, and many other technologies, researchers have modified a gold surface so that it switches from a water-attracting mode to a water-repelling one on command. With that capability, a flip of a switch could cause drug molecules, proteins, or cells to collect on the surface or to suddenly be released from it.

The turncoat layer, atop a gold-coated wafer, is made of neatly aligned, chainlike molecules that stand up like bristles on a brush. The molecules' tips exposed to the world are negatively charged Adj. 1. negatively charged - having a negative charge; "electrons are negative"
electronegative, negative

charged - of a particle or body or system; having a net amount of positive or negative electric charge; "charged particles"; "a charged battery"
 and attract water, but the molecules' midsections shun water. When scientists apply an electric field to the wafer, the gold attracts the molecules' negative tips and each bristle bristle

1. the thick strong animal fibers collected at commercial abattoirs for use in brushes.

2. the sharp serrated awns of grass and some cereal seeds that confer a capacity to penetrate normal skin and mucosa and to cause ulcerative stomatitis, grass seed abscess and the like.
 bends over, exposing its hydrophobic hydrophobic /hy·dro·pho·bic/ (-fo´bik)
1. pertaining to hydrophobia (rabies).

2. not readily absorbing water, or being adversely affected by water.

3.
 belly.

Since no chemical bond breaking or bond forming occurs, the process is easily reversible, says Joerg Lahann of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business,  (MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology ). He and his colleagues from MIT and 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
 and Berkeley describe their surface in the Jan. 17 Science.

Making the surface took some computation and a neat chemical trick. When the bristle molecules assemble themselves onto a gold surface, they usually pack together so tightly that they can't bend over Bend over may refer to the action of bending one's body over, as in to pick up something, or, for example, as the hydra does in order to move when hunting, in dancing (like in the various breakdance moves), gymnastics, and sports (like snap football). . To overcome this problem, Lahann and his coworkers ran simulations that showed that each molecular bristle needs at least 0.65 square nanometer to bow. So, the team found a chemical group that takes up about 0.67 square nanometer of space and linked it to the negatively charged tip of the molecular bristles. Once these mushroom-shaped molecules assembled on the gold, they each occupied about 0.67 square nanometer. When the scientists chemically lopped off the molecules' space-filling heads, each bristle had enough room to bend over.

"This is quite creative work," comments chemical engineer Manoj K. Chaudhury of Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa. For use in many technologies, the technique needs to produce a surface that is even more repellant to water than those in the tests so far, he notes. Then the method would prove useful, for example, in microfluidic devices in which fluid must be reliably directed through exquisitely fine pathways.
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Article Details
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Author:Gorman, J.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 18, 2003
Words:363
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