analytica-word.com

Current News

Country:
Operation:
Search for:
Overview Companies Countries
All   Business   Career   Cooperation   Finances   Laws   Manufacturing   Market
People   Politics   Price Development   Products   Research   Technology

Contact | Print version | PDF version | Send article | RSS-FeedRSS feed

Nanorods get even smaller
Scientists in Canada have developed a simple method to control the size of nanorods, making them more useful for catalytic applications.

27 Jun 2008 - Scientists have made mesoporous silica nanorods previously using an acidic solution of tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) and a polyethylene oxide known as P123. However, to make the nanorods more useful for encapsulating and transporting molecules, a way to make smaller particles is required.

 
Linda Nazar and colleagues at the University of Waterloo found they could control the size of the nanorods simply by using a more dilute solution of TEOS and P123. They were able to halt the synthesis at an early stage of growth, allowing them to make nanorods far smaller than previously reported. Nazar believes that using a dilute solution minimises the chance of newly formed particles colliding with each other and forming aggregates.
 
'The method we invented will hopefully initiate a new round of discovery in functional nanosized mesoporous materials with specific high-transport properties,' says Nazar.
 
Original publication. Xiulei Ji, Kyu T. Lee, Muguette Monjauze and Linda F. Nazar, Chem. Commun., 2008

Further information: http://www.rsc.org/Publishing/Journals/CC/article.asp?doi=b804327b

 
Contact / Request Information
Additional information

Royal Society of Chemistry
Cambridge, United Kingdom

News
-  14 Nov 2008 - Brushing up on sensors
-  13 Nov 2008 - Mechanical calculations for methyl transfer in solution
-  12 Nov 2008 - UK fingerprint "developer” can read a letter from its envelope
 more news
Newsletter Subscription
Your e-mail:
Top  
© 2007-2008 Messe München GmbH