31 August 2007 University of Leicester There's Gold In Them Thar ExhaustsLeicester discovery paves way for extraordinary applications including targeted drug delivery and cleaner fuels |
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A University of Leicester research team is working on a new technique for growing nanoparticles which could have extraordinary implications in electronics, medicine, the measurement of atmospheric air and the cleansing of car exhausts. Dr Andrew Ellis and Dr Shengfu Yang, both of the University’s Department of Chemistry, have discovered a niche way of making nanoparticles that cannot be formed in any other way. Working with Professor Chris Binns and Dr Klaus von Haeften in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, they are developing a technique involving the use of helium nanodroplets. These are droplets of superfluid liquid helium, consisting of thousands, even millions, of helium atoms loosely bound together. Atoms and molecules can enter these droplets and can be assembled into structures that cannot be made by any conventional chemical synthesis. Dr Ellis explained: “The technique gives us the ability to design nanoparticles layer by layer. These layers can be a solid, such as a metal, or a gas or liquid. So we could have a liquid or gaseous core with a solid shell round it. “We are still exploring what uses this might have. We hope that it will enable us to design new types of catalysts for improved manufacture of chemicals. Other possibilities include the construction of nanoparticles for storing information in smaller hard disk drives in PCs, or maybe even a useful way of introducing small drug molecules into specific locations in the human body.” The layer-by-layer growth of nanoparticles inside ultra-cold helium droplets will allow the researchers to synthesise entirely new classes of nanoparticles. Some possibilities include:
For more information on this please contact: Dr Andrew Ellis, Department of Chemistry, University of Leicester, tel 0116 252 2138, email andrew.ellis@le.ac.uk Dr Shengfu Yang, Department of Chemistry, University of Leicester, tel 0116 252 2115, email sfy1@le.ac.uk
Story posted: 30th August 2007
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