Scienceshow/Nanotechnology

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Nanotechnology Demonstration Experiments and Hands-on Activities

Completed Guides

All guides are listed on the overview page

Show sequences

Show: Intro to nanotech

This show sequence contains material for easily more than 2 hours of stand-up nanotechnology show with plenty of hands-on activities to keep the audience occupied for much longer. There is a kind of red thread going through the show, but emphasis is on showing the wide variety of nanoscale phenomena people will see in their every day life or that can be demonstrated without complicated setups.

Why things are white

This is not really nano, it only shows is that microstructured surfaces can give the white color and is different from the rayleigh scattering in nanoparticles described later.

Light scattering in transparent materials

Index matching

How to make white things disappear

Index of refraction of transparent materials and liquids
Materialnindex matching
Solid
Pyrex1.47Cooking oil
Quartz1.544-1.553
PMMA (Acrylic glass)1.4893-1.492
Nylon1.53-1.566
polystyrene1.55- 1.60
Polycarbonate1.584-1.586
Wool1.553 Benzyl alcohol
Cotton/linen1.515
Paper/cellulose
Cellulose acetate1.4750
Kitchen Salt (NaCl)1.516-1.544
Sugar/Sucrose1.5376
Diamond2.417
Gallium phosphide3.50
Liquids
water1.33
ethanol1.36
Paraffin1.332-1.412
Acetonitrile1.3441
Polyunsaturated oils1.371-1.432
Cyclohexane1.4260
Ethylene Glycol1.4318
Glycerol/glycerin1.4729
Sunflower oil1.474-1.475
Sugar solution (80%)1.49
Benzene1.5010
Benzyl alcohol 1.538-1.540
2-Iodoethanol1.5720
Carbon disulfide1.63
Methylene iodide1.74

Mixing liquids like glycerol and water can make solutions with intermediate refractive indexes.

Graded index matching

By gradually changing the index of refraction, reflections can be avoided. This can be done by nanostructuring surfaces. For instance silicon surface etched into small spikes becomes black (silicon black) unlike the silvery shine of the smooth surface.

The blue sky

Silver nanoparticles

Gold nanoparticles

Dyes and fluorescent molecules

Spectrometers and diffraction

Subwavelength optical elements

Tuning the material properties

Different materials absorption, transmission and reflection properties

Photonic Crystals

Ionization

Field Ionization

The ionization process can also be used in itself to analyze what gasses are present and it can be made better with nanoscale tips, field ionization is also used to make ions in air purifiers (that actually also produce a lot of ozone that isn't healthy)

Molecular Surface Forces

Superhydrophilic surfaces

Sticktion and Adhesion

Oil thin films

Estimate the size of moleculs from oil droplets spreading on water.

Soap thin films

In soap bubbles we can see such effects ([SoapBubbler.com website with soap bubbles]).

Lipid bilayers

'Superhydrophobic' coatings

Coated particles

If you boil it, the starch glycose polymer chains will dissolve into the water.

Brownian Motion

The motion of matter due to its thermal energy. This is why ferrofluids do not just clump together but stay fluid.

Iron nanoparticles

Combustion

Ferrofluids

Electrically controllable particles

Like the magnetic fields that control ferrofluids - electrical fields can be used to control small particles dispersed in liquids.

Quantized conductivity

Aerogels, another kind of glass

Mechanical properties of clean surfaces

The different types of Carbon

Carbon is a good example of a material that can have numerous different nanostructures:

Diamagnetism

Amorphous materials

Memory metals

Catalysis

Chemical reaction can often occur at much lower temperatures and more efficiently if catalytic materials are present. For example, various enzymes are used to enhance biochemical processes in detergents and washing powders so you can wash clothes at lower temperatures and with less power and detergent consumption. Catalysts are also heavily used in industrial chemical processes. Often the catalytic material is very expensive and only the small reactive sites on the material surface are actually catalytically active. For these reasons it is much more efficient to use nanostructured catalytic substances that maximize the catalyst area with many reactive sites and a minimal consumption of the material itself.

Polymers

DNA

Enzymes

Food

A welath of dispersions and nanosize particles can be found in food. See e.g. the milk experiment with Rayleigh scattering.

Complete dialogue show examples

The colors in the sky

This show aims at demonstrating a wide variety of nanoscale phenomena that appears in everyday life or relate to everyday life. It is the intention the audience should get several hands-on experiments during the show and participate to some extent. A different sequence is naturally possible and experiments can easily be added or left out depending on the audience and available materials. Depending on the school level of the audience you will probably want to modify this sequence. 'to show' in this description means to pass the sample around whenever possible.

White Nanostructures

Walking around you will actually see a wealth of effects in you daily life that comes from nanoscale phenomena and structures. For instance, you might wonder why things are white. What do you know that's is normally white? Do you know why?

Clouds - If you think of the clouds, they can give us both rainbows or be heavy gray rain clouds or white fluffy clouds.

Rainbows come from refraction of light in the droplet, just like the good old Pink Floyd cover where a white light beam is split into a rainbow. If the droplets are too dense, the rainbow colours will be scattered in many droplets and eventually we will see a diffuse mixture of all colors which gives us white light.

We can make nice clouds by using liquid nitrogen.

So things can be white even if they are clear and transparent as 'bulk' materials, simply because the are cut into small pieces that refract light in all directions. We know that from salt as well, where the individual salt grain can be a nice clear crystal, while a pile of such grains is white.

The refraction of light in the particles depends on the change in refractive index between the surroundings and the material.

Wool is another example of a white material, and here the white color comes from the roughness of the practically transparent wool fibres (when they are from white sheep).

So it is probably not a good idea to make swimsuits from textiles that match the refractive index of water :-)

The effect does not always have to be nano - salt is white even when the particles are large enough to be visible.

(*Guide: Invisible Glass. we can also show the indexmatching effect by submerging a glass filled with clear oil or a glass figure in an clear oil bath also kept in transparent glass, and ask people to guess what's in it - its invisible until we pull it up)

The Blue Sky

Now we will turn into an effect that does require nanoscale particles and you hopefully see almost every day.

Nanoparticles are present in the sky above us - small water droplets, grains of salt from the sea...

When the particles become smaller than the wavelength of light the begin to scatter light different than the big water droplets making rainbows. It is called Rayleigh scattering and is very dependent on the wavelength of the light.

To illustrate this we will make some sulfur nanoparticles. Sulfur is yellow (show a vial of yellow sulfur crystals), but when made into nanoparticles they can take on many colors.

another recipe uses 6.75L water, 135g sodium thiosulfate and 5 ml Conc. Acid but I dont like to have conc. acid in class demonstrations)

As the particles grow because sulfur is precipitated from the solution and aglomerate to form nanoparticles, you see a change in color. The light coming from the sides of the vial is blue while the light going through it is red - you can see what happens when you look into the sky on a bright day and the blue part of the sunlight passing over you is scattered down towards you while the red continues out towards the people looking at the sunset in the horizon. If there is too much sulfur available, at some point the particles become so dense no light passes through the vial, then you should use less liquid to start the reaction. After some time the particles grow so big that they scatter white light like the white cloud (possibly a slightly yellowish one due to the color of sulfur). The blue sky is definitely a nano-scale phenomena.

Not only do we inhale nanoparticles and enjoy their colors in the sunset and blue sky, we drink them very often.

Silver nanoparticles

There are of course many types of nanoparticles - harmless, healthy, dangerous, and useful ones, just like there are different materials around us.

A quick way to show nanoparticles is to make silver nanoparticles by mixing silver nitrate solution with sodium citrate and boil it reducing the silver to free metallic silver. The citrate stabilizes the silver which assembles in charged thin-film coated nanoparticles.

First we will show what happens when you reduce silver without a stabilizing agent.

Before the show: Add one drop 0.4 M NaOH (aq) per ml of 5%wt silver nitrate solution and shake gently. Then add 1M NaOH dropwise while shaking until the precipitate just dissolves. This is Tollen's reagent, a diaminesilver(I) complex. Use it within a couple of hours. Do not store Tollens reagent because it can form silver nitride which is highly explosive if left for longer periods. After use, neutralise it with dilute nitric acid and flush out in drain if permitted. Tollens reagent recipe tollens reagent

We have a silver solution called tollens reagent and we add a droplet of dextrose that will reduce the silver but not protect the silver from assembling in large structures.

(Put the test tube in a warm water bath and add dextrose solution by letting a droplet slide down the side of the glass, and do not touch it until the reaction has made a nice silver mirror. (aldehydes give a silver mirror, ketones a yellowish mirror and alkynes with a triple bond in the 1-position give a yellow precipitate of silver carbide.))

And so we get a beautiful silver mirror.

When we dilute the silver particle solution so we can look through it, se can by holding it in front and behind a lamp see that light comming through it or 'reflected' from it has different colors. Red/orange light pass through while green-blue light is reflected.

The silver nano particles scatter light the has short wavelenghts and leaves most of the yellow and red light pass through. If you make them with gold you get red nanoparticles instead (but it is more expensive chemicals).

The silver and gold nanoparticles are used for many things. Gold nanoparticles is widely used for makring chemical reactions -for instance the red color in pregnancy tests often comes from gold nanoparticles. Silver nanoparticles can be used to kill bacteria and you can for instance buy socks with silver nanoparticles, and at some point people even believed they should be healthy to drink... I wouldn't try to do that.

Resources

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