An international team of scientists has created the first molecular motor powered solely by sunlight. By acting like pistons that move back and forth, these motors, which are only nanometers or billionths of meters across, could help read out data as ones and zeroes "for molecular photonics and electronics, two rapidly growing fields aimed at the construction of chemical computers," said researcher Vincenzo Balzani, a chemist at the University of Bologna, Italy.
Such motors could also operate nanovalves covering the surfaces of porous silica-based nanoparticles. Scientists could then use light to fill and empty the pores of these nanoparticles with molecules such as anti-cancer drugs. After doctors target cancers with these nanoparticles, "then light is used to trigger the release of the drug," said researcher J. Fraser Stoddart, a nanochemist at the University of California at Los Angeles.
The motor was designed and built over six years by researchers at the University of Bologna and UCLA. It essentially resembles a dumbbell roughly 6 nanometers long that threads a ring about 1.3 nanometers wide. The ring can move up and down the rod of the dumbbell but cannot go past the bulky stoppers at its ends.
There are two sites on the dumbbell's rod that the ring prefers to encircle. When one of the dumbbell's stoppers absorbs sunlight, it transfers an electron to one of these ports of call, driving the ring to then shuffle over to the other station. The ring returns to the old site after the electron transfers back to the stopper, allowing the cycle to begin all over again.
"The motions executed by the nanomotor are quite rapid. A full cycle is carried out in less than one-thousandth of a second," Stoddart said. That is roughly equivalent to "a car's engine running at 60,000 revolutions per minute," Balzani added.
"Noteworthy is the fact that this molecular motor does not require a chemical fuel to operate," said Devens Gust, a chemist at Arizona State University in Tempe who did not participate in this study. "Previous motors require fuel, including biological motors. The power for this system comes directly from light, with no need to move fuels around, consume them, and generate waste products. The analogy would be a solar-powered car vs. one fueled by a gasoline engine."
"This is an important step forward in the chemists' quest for molecular machines. I am impressed by the complexity of the synthesized structure," said Josef Michl, a chemist at the University of Colorado at Boulder who did not participate in this study.
At the moment, the nanomotors swim around fairly randomly in solution "and work independently and incoherently from one another, so that no work can actually be extracted from such a system," Balzani said. The researchers are now working to line these motors onto surfaces and into membranes so they can all work together "to obtain mechanical work on the macroscopic scale," Stoddart added. Their findings appeared online Jan. 23 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Copyright 2006 by United Press International
Related stories:
'Smart' materials get smarter with ability to better control shape and size
A dynamic way to alter the shape and size of microscopic three-dimensional structures built out of proteins has been developed by biological chemist Jason Shear and his former graduate student Bryan Kaehr at The University of Texas at Austin.
Tethered molecules act as light-driven reversible nanoswitches
Our ability to see is based on molecules in the eye that flip from one conformation to another when exposed to visible light. Now, a new technique for attaching light-sensitive organic molecules to metal surfaces allows the molecules to be switched between two different configurations in response to exposure to different wavelengths of light. Because the configuration changes are reversible and can be controlled without direct contact, this technique could enable applications that can be controlled at the molecular scale.
Aromaticity may occur in unexpected materials
Shiv Khanna, Ph.D., professor of physics, and colleagues from Virginia Commonwealth University and Penn State, were recently highlighted in the Editor’s Choice section of the journal
Science, as well as the trade publication Chemical & Engineering News, for the group’s work on the synthesis of an unusual inorganic ring molecule made of arsenic and tellurium, As
2Te
2-2, found to have magnetic and aromatic characteristics.
Physicists report novel interaction between superconductivity and magnetism
An international collaboration of researchers led by Morten Ring Eskildsen, an assistant professor of physics at the University of Notre Dame, has discovered an altogether new way in which superconducting electrons can interact with an applied magnetic field.
'Kind and Gentle' Molecular Machine Could Operate at Near-Equilibrium
Molecular machines – tiny machines made of molecules that do mechanical work – are usually thought to operate in a state of non-equilibrium. This makes sense, considering that macro-sized machines operate at non-equilibrium, requiring an additional force to move. On the other hand, equilibrium implies that forces cancel each other out, resulting in an unchanging system, often at rest.
How molecular muscles help cells divide
Time-lapse videos and computer simulations provide the first concrete molecular explanation of how a cell flexes tiny muscle-like structures to pinch itself into two daughter cells at the end of each cell division, according to a report in
Science Express.
'Frequency comb' spectroscopy proves to be powerful chemical analysis tool
Physicists at JILA have designed and demonstrated a highly sensitive new tool for real-time analysis of the quantity, structure and dynamics of a variety of atoms and molecules simultaneously, even in minuscule gas samples. The technology could provide unprecedented capabilities in many settings, such as chemistry laboratories, environmental monitoring stations, security sites screening for explosives or biochemical weapons, and medical offices where patients' breath is analyzed to monitor disease.
UCLA chemists create nano valve
UCLA chemists have created the first nano valve that can be opened and closed at will to trap and release molecules. The discovery, federally funded by the National Science Foundation, will be published July 19 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.