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Home > News > New metal crystals, formed on a cotton assembly line

March 26th, 2007

New metal crystals, formed on a cotton assembly line

Abstract:
Appropriating cellulose fibers from cotton and crystallizing them, scientists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have grown never-before-seen configurations of metal crystals that show promise as components in biosensors, biological imaging, drug delivery and catalytic converters.

Deriving the desired chemical and physical properties necessary for those applications hinges on the uniform size of the metal crystals. Depending on the metal, they must be between 2 and 200 nanometers, Yongsoon Shin, a staff scientist at the Department of Energy laboratory in Richland, Wash., reported Monday at the national meeting of the American Chemical Society (8:30-11 a.m. session "Nanotechnology: A Fiber Perspective" ). PNNL laboratory fellow Gregory Exarhos led the research.

Source:
nanowerk.com

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