1 / 40

Chapter 3 Introduction to Nanophysics

Chapter 3 Introduction to Nanophysics. Chapter 3. Introduction to Nanophysics. Forces and Interactions A Closer Look at Fluidics The Wave Nature of Light Practical Applications . Introduction to Nanophysics. 1. 3. Section 1: Forces and Interactions. Forms of Energy Electrical Forces

ashby
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 3 Introduction to Nanophysics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 3 • Introduction to Nanophysics

  2. Chapter 3 Introduction to Nanophysics • Forces and Interactions • A Closer Look at Fluidics • The Wave Nature of Light • Practical Applications

  3. Introduction to Nanophysics • 1 • 3 Section 1: Forces and Interactions • Forms of Energy • Electrical Forces • Quantum Physics • The Polar Nature of Water

  4. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Four Fundamental Forces Act Upon All Matter • Gravity • Electromagnetic • Weak Nuclear • Strong Nuclear

  5. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Relative Influence of Forces Changes with Scale

  6. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Forces in a Hydrogen Atom

  7. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Electrical Forces • Atoms and Molecules • Electrostatic interactions • Chemical bonds • Hydrogen bonds • Polarizability • Van der Waals interactions • Electromagnetic Radiation • X-rays • UV rays • Physiological Electrical Signals • Nervous system (e.g., brain, nerves) • Muscles (e.g., heartbeat)

  8. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Energy is Required or Released when Particles Interact with Forces • Energy Vocabulary • Mechanical work (w): force applied over a distance • Heat (q): change in thermal energy reservoir during a physical, chemical, or biological process (q=ΔH when pressure is constant) • Entropy (S): measure of the number of ways objects can interact • Gibbs free energy (ΔG) • Relationship among enthaply (ΔH), entropy (ΔS), temperature (T) • ΔG = ΔH – TΔS • ΔG < 0 spontaneous process (additional energy not required) • ΔG = 0 equilibrium situation • ΔG > 0 non-spontaneous process • At the nanoscale, energy can flow between internal energy, in the form of chemical bonds, and useable energy or heat (ΔH).

  9. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Quantum Physics Model of Matter • Matter Is Composed of Atoms and Molecules • Atoms are composed of elementary particles • Molecules are composed of atoms • Electrostatic Interactions Predominate • Within molecules and atoms • Among molecules and atom • Quanta • Electrons are confined to regions of space; therefore their energy is restricted to discrete values • Transitions between energy levels occurs in discrete increments

  10. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Quantum Physics Model of Matter • Atoms Are Composed of Elementary Particles • Central nucleus with two particle types: • Neutrons (no charge) • Positively charged protons • Negatively charged electrons found around and about the nucleus • Electrons Are In Constant Motion • Individual electrons localized into regions of space with defined energy • Electron transitions occur in defined increments (energy is quantized) • Fluctuating, Non-Uniform Charge Distribution Surrounds the Atom

  11. Forces and Interactions • 3 • 1 Quantum Physics Model of Matter • Molecules Are Composed of Atoms • Relative location of atomic nuclei give shape to the molecule • Electrons Are In Constant Motion • Electrons are shared among atoms in the molecule in covalent bonds • Covalent bonds between nuclei have shapes, locations, energies • σ-bonds, π-bonds • molecular orbitals • Fluctuating, Non-Uniform Charge Distribution Surrounds the Molecule

  12. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Quantum Physics Model of Matter • Electrostatic Interactions • A predominant force among molecules • Origin: fluctuating, non-uniform charge distribution surrounding the molecule

  13. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Water Molecule • 10 Electrons • 8 from O • 1 from each H • 10 Protons • 8 from O nucleus • 1 from each H nucleus

  14. Forces and Interactions • 1 • 3 Water Molecule • Electric Dipole • Partial Negative Charge at Oxygen Apex • Partial Positive Charge at Hydrogens

  15. Introduction to Nanophysics • 2 • 3 Section 2: A Closer Look at Fluidics • Cohesion and Surface Tension • Hydrophobicity • Adhesive Forces and Capillary Action • Viscosity • Laminar and Turbulent Flow

  16. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Cohesion and Surface Tension • Properties of Liquids • Liquid molecules move (Brownian motion) • Liquid phase molecules are attracted to: • Each other (cohesion) • Surrounding surfaces (adhesion) • Surrounding atmosphere • Surface Tension • Measures the difference between a liquid molecule’s attraction to other liquid molecules and to the surrounding fluid

  17. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Cohesion and Surface Tension

  18. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Surfaces Hydrophilic Surface Hydrophobic Surface

  19. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Cohesion and Surface Tension

  20. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Contact Angle Hydrophilic Surface Hydrophobic Surface Super Hydrophobic Surface

  21. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Super Hydrophobic Surface Lotus Leaf

  22. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Adhesive Forces and Capillary Action

  23. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Fluid Flow in Channels • Laminar Flow • Molecules moving in one direction, longitudinally • Turbulent Flow • Molecules moving in random directions with net longitudinal flow

  24. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Viscosity Coefficient η • Viscosity • Fluid “thickness” • Quickness or slowness of fluid flow • Measure of force applied to cross-sectional area of fluid for a period of time Volume of Fluid Flowing through a Pipe Velocity of a Sphere Falling through the Fluid

  25. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Laminar and Turbulent Flow

  26. A Closer Look at Fluidics • 2 • 3 Forces Acting on Pen Tip in DPN

  27. Introduction to Nanophysics • 3 • 3 Section 3: The Wave Nature of Light • Electromagnetic Radiation, Wavelengths, and Energy • Reflection, Refraction, and Wave Interference • Diffraction and Diffraction Gratings • Nanoscale Diffraction with X-rays

  28. The Wave Nature of Light • 3 • 3 Electromagnetic Spectrum

  29. The Wave Nature of Light • 3 • 3 Young’s Double Slit Experiment

  30. The Wave Nature of Light • 3 • 3 Young’s Double Slit Experiment, Continued Wave Particle

  31. The Wave Nature of Light • 3 • 3 Young’s Double Slit Experiment, Continued nλ = d sin θ ≈ d (x / L) TOP FRONT n = 2 x θ d n = 1 n = 2 L

  32. The Wave Nature of Light • 3 • 3 Reflective Diffraction n∙λ = d∙(sinθi+ sinθd)

  33. The Wave Nature of Light • 3 • 3 X-Ray Diffraction Bragg law: n∙λ = 2∙d∙sinθ

  34. Introduction to Nanophysics • 4 • 3 Section 4: Practical Applications • Keeping Things Clean • A Miniature Laboratory • Protein Sensors • Light Under Control

  35. Practical Applications • 4 • 3 Keeping Things Clean Lotus Leaf

  36. Practical Applications • 4 • 3 Keeping Things Clean

  37. Practical Applications • 4 • 3 A Miniature Laboratory

  38. 4 • 3 • Practical Applications Protein Sensor Concept • Idea • Create a visible light diffraction grating with known periodicity and ridge height • Coat grating surface with an affinity label for a target protein • Characterize the diffraction wavelength at specific viewing angles • Expose coated grating to biological sample containing target protein; isolate protein coated diffraction grating • Monitor changes in wavelength as a function of protein binding • Technological Challenges • Ridge material compatibility (substrate, affinity label, target protein solutions) • Detecting small changes in diffraction wavelength • Cost effectiveness

  39. Practical Applications • 4 • 3 Protein Sensors • Lipid Grating Biosensor • Illuminate a nanotechnology grating with white light. Detect intensity changes in the diffracted light upon analyte binding with 5 nm detection limits • Grating Fabrication with Dip Pen Nanolithography • Enabling DPN Technology • Multilayer phospholipid ink • Self-assembling phospholipid (e.g., DOPC) • Biofunctional phospholipid affinity label for analyte • Precision patterning on PMMA substrates • 500 to 700 nm ridge spacing, ≤ 80 nm ridge height

  40. 4 • 3 • Practical Applications Light Under Control • Photonic Crystals • 1-D to 3-D nanoscale voids for storage of photons • Active Research Areas • Materials for information storage devices • Read/write mechanisms

More Related