AZoM - The A to Z of Materials


 
Granta Design - Software, data, and materials databases
World leader in design and manufacture of high-performance CCD, ICCD, sCMOS, EMCCD for scientific imaging, microscopy and spectroscopy applications
Materials testing services for aerospace to automotives, pharmaceuticals to polymers
Bruker Handheld XRF Spectrometers
Micromeritics is an Industry Leader in Particle Science and Particle Technology
CILAS state of the art laser particle size analyzers
Vesuvius - Solutions for molten metal, glass and renewable energy industries
University of Surrey-Short Courses and MSc in Materials science
NanoTest™, the complete nanomechanical testing center
X-Ray diffractometers from Shimadzu
Email / Share

Chemical Sensors Made from Nanomaterials

Posted in | Chemistry | Nanomaterials and Nanotechnology

 



 

Tab options

 

New types of chemical sensors for environmental monitoring, food safety or security applications could be based on nanotechnology, according to Frank Osterloh, an assistant professor of chemistry at UC Davis.

"Nanomaterials are very well suited for chemical sensor applications, because their physical properties often vary considerably in response to changes of the chemical environment," Osterloh said. Because nanomaterials can be made up of structures just a few atoms across, just a few molecules of chemical can trigger a response, he said.

Osterloh, with graduate student Xiubin Qi and former student Jason Martino, discovered that nanowires made of lithium, molybdenum and selenium atoms show changes in electrical resistance of up to 200 percent when exposed to vapors of organic solvents. By depositing the nanowires between two conductors, they made a simple chemical sensor.

By attaching chemical groups to the nanowires, the researchers could modify the sensor to measure the acidity of a solution. The team is now investigating if this "programming" property can be extended to make sensors for the detection of explosives or environmental contaminants such as lead in drinking water, Osterloh said.

The work will be presented at the 228th national meeting of the American Chemical Society in Philadelphia, Aug. 22-26.

Osterloh's laboratory is also experimenting with nanoscale chemical sensors based on materials that change colour; nanomaterials that can be manipulated in magnetic fields; and luminescent materials.

For more information on nanomaterials, click here.

Posted August 24th, 2004

 

AZoM News Archive Page

Powerful MAC OS compatible scanning probe microscope SPM
Microtrac Particle Size Distribution & Characterization Analyzers
Bodycote Heat Treatments - Electron Beam Welding Services
The New D8 ADVANCE – the 1st truly all-purpose Diffraction Solution for X-ray Powder Diffraction
Malvern Morphologi G3 particle characterization system
Approved Professional Development Courses from Loughborough University
ADMET universal materials testing machines

 

version 2.0 - AZoM™ - The A to Z of Materials and AZojomo - The "AZo Journal of Materials Online"...AZoM™.com Pty.Ltd Copyright © 2000-2010