New nano material developed
The University of Sydney
Wednesday, 18 September 2013
A new nanostructured material with applications that could include
reducing condensation in airplane cabins and enabling certain medical
tests without the need for high tech laboratories has been developed by
researchers at the University of Sydney.
"The newly discovered material uses raspberry particles - so-called
because of their appearance - which can trap tiny water droplets and
prevent them from rolling off surfaces, even when that surface is turned
upside down," said Dr Andrew Telford from the University's School of
Chemistry and lead author of the research recently published in the
journal, Chemistry of Materials.
The ability to immobilise very small droplets on a surface is,
according to Dr Telford, a significant achievement with innumerable
potential applications.
Raspberry particles mimic the surface structure of some rose petals.
"Water droplets bead up in a spherical shape on top of rose petals,"
Dr Telford said. "This is a sign the flower is highly water repellent."
The reasons for this are complex and largely due to the special
structure of the rose petal's surface. The research team replicated the
rose petal by assembling raspberry particles in the lab using spherical
micro- and nanoparticles.
The result is that water droplets bead up when placed on films of the
raspberry particles and they're not able to drip down from it, even
when turned upside down.
"Raspberry particle films can be described as sticky tape for water droplets," Dr Telford said.
This could be useful in preventing condensation issues in airplane
cabins. It could also help rapidly process simple medical tests on
free-standing droplets, with the potential for very high turnover of
tests with inexpensive equipment and in remote areas.
Other exciting applications are under study: if we use this
nanotechnology to control how a surface is structured we can influence
how it will interact with water.
"This means we will be able to design a surface that does whatever you need it to do.
"We could also design a surface that stays dry forever, never needs
cleaning or able to repel bacteria or even prevent mould and fungi
growth.
"We could then tweak the same structure by changing its composition so it forces water to spread very quickly.
"This could be used on quick-dry walls and roofs which would also help to cool down houses.
"This can only be achieved with a very clear understanding of the
science behind the chemical properties and construction of the surface,"
he said.
The discovery is also potentially viable commercially.
"Our team's discovery is the first that allows for the preparation of
raspberry particles on an industrial scale and we are now in a position
where we can prepare large quantities of these particles without the
need to build special plants or equipment," Dr Telford said.
The other research team members and journal authors are Associate
Professor Brian Hawkett and Dr Chiara Neto, both from the School of
Chemistry and Dr Chris Such from Dulux Australia, that supported the
research through an Australian Research Council Linkage Project grant.
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