|
On the Cutting Edge: Carbon Nanotube Cutlery
Researchers at the National Institute
of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University
of Colorado at Boulder (CU) have designed a carbon nanotube
knife that, in theory, would work like a tight-wire
cheese slicer. In a paper presented this month at the
2006 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and
Exposition, the research team announced a prototype
nanoknife that could, in the future, become a tabletop
tool of biology, allowing scientists to cut and study
cells more precisely than they can today.
 |
| Scanning electron micrograph of a prototype 'nanoknife'
shows a single carbon nanotube stretched between
two tungsten needles. Triangular probe is the tip
of an atomic force cantilever used to determine
the breaking point of the knife. (Color added for
clarity.) |
For years, biologists have wrestled with conventional
diamond or glass knives, which cut frozen cell samples
at a large angle, forcing the samples to bend and sometimes
later crack. Because carbon nanotubes are extremely
strong and slender in diameter, they make ideal materials
for thinly cutting precise slivers of cells. In particular,
scientists might use the nanoknife to make 3D images
of cells and tissues for electron tomography, which
requires samples less than 300 nanometers thick.
By manipulating carbon nanotubes inside scanning electron
microscopes, 21st-century nanosmiths have begun crafting
a suite of research tools, including nanotweezers, nanobearings
and nano-oscillators. To design the nanoknife, the NIST
and CU scientists welded a carbon nanotube between two
electrochemically sharpened tungsten needles. In the
resulting prototype, the nanotube stretches between
two ends of a tungsten wire loop. The knife resembles
a steel wire that cuts a block of cheese.
To begin demonstrating the feasibility of their knife
design, the researchers assessed its mechanical strength
in force tests, applying increasing pressure to the
device. The team found that the welds were the weakest
point of the nanoknife, and they are now experimenting
with alternative welding techniques. The researchers
plan to test the nanoknife on a block of wax later this
year (cells typically are immobilized in wax for dissection
and microscopy.)
Visit www.nist.gov
|