Nanochemistry
Nanochemistry
Nanochemistry
BOOKS ON NANOTEHNOLOGY
S.NO.
TITLE
AUTHOR
1.
Mick Wilson
2.
Nanotechnology (AIP-Press)
Gregory L. Timp
3.
4.
Braun Paul V
5.
Pauleau Yves
6.
Balzani Vincenzo
7.
Jones Richard A L
8.
K. Eric Drexler
CONTENTS
Introduction
Principle
Methods of preparation
Properties
Techniques
Application Areas
Nanoscience
A discipline concerning with making,
manipulating and imaging materials having at
least one spatial dimension in the size range 1
100 nm
Nanotechnology
A device or machine, product or process based
upon individual or multiple integrated
nanoscale components
Nanochemistry
Hierarchical Assembly
Feature of self-assembly, where primary building blocks
associate into more complex secondary structures that are
integrated into the next size level in the hierarchy. This
organizational scheme continues until the highest level in the
hierarchy is reached.
Characteristic of many self-assembling biological structures.
Nano powder/crystals
Nanotubes
Nanowires
Nanocomposites etc.
Nano powder/crystals
Crystals of nanometer dimensions.
Typical dimensions of 1 to 50 nanometers
(nm), intermediate in size between molecules
and bulk materials.
Exhibit intermediate properties.
Applications as:
o Biochemical tags
o As laser and optical components
o For the preparation of display devices
o For chemical catalysis.
Nanotubes
Nanowires
Very small rods of atoms.
Solid, dense structures, much like a
conventional wire.
Offer the potential for creating very
small IC components.
Nanocomposites
Methods of Preparation
By synthesis strategy
By nature of process
By medium of synthesis
1. By synthesis strategy
a. Bottom-Up Strategy:
By the agglomeration of atoms or particles.
b. Top-Down Strategy: (Attrition; like- erosion)
By breaking the larger particles to the nano size.
Generally done by high energy ball milling.
2. By nature of process
a. Physical methods:
Only the size of the particles can be reduced mechanically.
Physical properties will be changed.
No change in chemical properties.
chemical
3. By medium of synthesis
(i) Gas phase synthesis
(ii) Liquid phase synthesis
(iii)Solid phase synthesis
a. Chemical precipitation
Fast chemical reaction is required to obtain a high degree of
super-saturation of the product to favor homogeneous
nucleation.
Super-saturationis a
state of asolutionthat
contains more of the
dissolved material that
could be dissolved by
thesolventunder normal
circumstances.
both
aliquidphase
andsolidphase
whose
d. Micro-emulsion synthesis
Microemulsions: Thermodynamically stable, optically clear
dispersions of two immiscible liquids, such as water and oil.
They are formed, when a surfactant lowers the oil/water interfacial
tension allowing thermal motions to spontaneously disperse the two
immiscible phases.
Reverse micelles are molecular self assemblies from surfactants which
have a spherical shape with a hydrophillic core and a hydrophobic tail
on the sphere surface.
Most popular method to prepare Nano-sized inorganic particles as
oxides.
Properties
Surface area: Large.
Reactivity: High due to the unsaturated bonds on their pristine surfaces.
Basic properties: Properties of materials change as:
- their size approaches the nanoscale.
- percentage of atoms at the surface of a material becomes significant.
Example- Gold nanoparticles melt at much lower temperatures (~300 C
for 2.5 nm size) than the gold slabs (1064C).
Optical properties: Often possess unexpected optical properties as they
are small enough to confine their electrons and produce quantum effects.
Example- Gold nanoparticles appear deep red to black in solution.
Techniques
Application Areas
Medicine
Diagnosis
Drug delivery
Tissue engineering
Environment
Catalysis
Filtration
Energy
Computers
Aerospace
Refineries
Vehicle manufacturing
Food packaging
Optics
Textiles
Cosmetics