Simulated fullerene tubules act as straws.Few children fail to marvel when they first discover that water, unassisted, can sneak part way up a thin straw. Now, computer simulations show that carbon tubules -- cylindrical versions of the all-carbon molecules called fullerenes -- act as molecular straws. These nanotubes can suck up all sorts of small molecules, says Jeremy Q. Broughton, a physicist at the Naval Research Laboratory Noun 1. Naval Research Laboratory - the United States Navy's defense laboratory that conducts basic and applied research for the Navy in a variety of scientific and technical disciplines NRL in Washington, D.C. Broughton and Navy lab colleague Mark R. Pederson created on their computer a tubule tubule /tu·bule/ (too´bul) a small tube. collecting tubule one of the terminal channels of the nephrons which open on the summits of the renal pyramids in the renal papillae. with 120 carbon atoms and then calculated how that tubule's electrons shift when a hydrogen fluoride hydrogen fluoride, chemical compound, HF, a colorless, fuming liquid or colorless gas that boils at 19.54°C;. It is miscible with water and is soluble in benzene, toluene, and concentrated sulfuric acid. molecule is brought close to each of its ends. For the simulation, they arranged the tubule's hexagons of carbon to make the open-ended cylinder metallic. They then put hydrogen atoms on the ends of the tubule so the dangling bonds of the carbons there would not latch onto any molecule that came near them. As the hydrogen fluoride molecules close in on the tubule, the two researchers found, the distribution of positive and negative charges in these dipolar di·pole n. 1. Physics A pair of electric charges or magnetic poles, of equal magnitude but of opposite sign or polarity, separated by a small distance. 2. Chemistry A molecule having two such charges or poles. molecules causes the tubule's mobile electrons to bunch up near the hydrogen fluoride. The attraction of the electrons, in turn, sucks the hydrogen fluoride molecules up and holds them, Pederson and Broughton report in the Nov. 2 PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS Physical Review Letters is one of the most prestigious journals in physics.[1] Since 1958, it has been published by the American Physical Society as an outgrowth of The Physical Review. . In more recent work, the Navy lab theorists have discovered that tubules will also take up molecules that are not dipoles. In these new simulations, the scientists tracked the movements of atoms, not electrons. They brought a 960-carbon tubule close to a 20,000-atom liquid reservoir of neon warmed to about its melting point. As it neared the neon surface, the tubule drew neon atoms from the surface into itself, Broughton told SCIENCE NEWS. With nonpolar nonpolar not having poles; not exhibiting dipole characteristics. atoms or molecules, weak attractions called van der Waal's forces Noun 1. van der Waal's forces - relatively weak attraction between neutral atoms and molecules arising from polarization induced in each particle by the presence of other particles attraction, attractive force - the force by which one object attracts another lead to the capillary action, Broughton says. These results demonstrate that tubules will suck up and retain any molecule small enough to fit into them, he adds. Broughton and Pederson think scientists can tailor the tubule to be selective about the molecules it picks up, in part by changing the way the hexagonal hex·ag·o·nal adj. 1. Having six sides. 2. Containing a hexagon or shaped like one. 3. Mineralogy sheets of carbon wind around to form it. They have also determined that they can increase the sucking strength by narrowing the tubule's radius. "With [these tubules], you can start making nanoscale devices that are mechanical, not electronic," Broughton notes. He envisions molecular-sized solenoids, pistons, and pumps, some of which may become components of nanoscale engines or devices used to restore function to ailing body parts. Even though scientists know how to mass-produce layered tubules (SN: 7/18/92, p.36) and fullerenes in the shape of layered spheres (SN: 10/24/92, p.277), no one has made single tubes. But, says Broughton, now that he and Pederson have come up with uses for these fullerene fullerene, any of a class of carbon molecules in which the carbon atoms are arranged into 12 pentagonal faces and 2 or more hexagonal faces to form a hollow sphere, cylinder, or similar figure. cylinders, chemists are more likely to synthesize single tubules. Meanwhile, Broughton offers a new name for them. "Rather than call them 'bucky tubes,' we can say they are 'sucky tubes,'" he says. |
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