nano-soft matter hsuan-yi chen dept of physics and center for complex systems, ncu

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Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex S ystems, NCU

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Page 1: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Nano-soft matter

Hsuan-Yi ChenDept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NC

U

Page 2: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Outline

• Motivation: crazy dreams • Self-assembly• Non-equilibrium dynamics• Summary

Page 3: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Motivation: why is nanoscience important or interesting?

Dream: Example:

Page 4: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Crazy dreams (good for publicity, and indeed, this is

what we want!)

We will build nano-machines.

Nano-machines will be intellegent and change (save) our lives.

How realistic is the above statement?

Page 5: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

The true lives in nano-world and the hard facts about our crazy dreams

Different dynamics, universal attractive interactions, molecular recognition, mass production, cost/effect……

Page 6: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Back to basic physics of our real world: Intermolecular forces

• All from E&M (some are QM)• Direct Coulomb: 1/r• Dipole in external E field 1/r3

• Dipole-dipole • Dipole-induced dipole, van der Waals 1/r6

• Electrolyte, salt, etc. exp(-r/k)• ** A likes A more than A likes B**. Why??

What can these interactions do for us in systems withmany (say, 100 to 100,000) particles?

Page 7: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Phase transitions and new phases

How to make that kind of structure??

Learn some statistical physics first!

Road to equilibrium: F = U-TS minimumHigh T: large S,

homogeneous phase (ex. Gas)

Low T: small U, ordered phase (ex. Crystal)

Phase transition: (interaction energy) ~ T

(entropy difference)O.Ikala and G. t. BrinkeScience 295 2408 (2002)

Page 8: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

AB: energy cost for a pair of A-B neighbors Entropy gain for mixing a pair ofA-B particles ~ kB

Simple systems: Binary fluids

A

B

F = U – TS

Phase separation at kT < O(AB)

A+B

Want to get cool structures?? Use principles of symmetry breaking.Use polymers.

Page 9: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Symmetry breaking : road to special “patterns”

Solidification: isotropic fluid phase anisotropic solid

Rev. Mod. Phys. 52, 1 (1980) Large curvature = large temperature gradient = fast growth

Page 10: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Polymers: material to make “patterns”

homopolymer

coarse-grained view

take thermal fluctuationsinto accountSize: submicron

Page 11: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

+

++

+ +

+ + + +

AB diblock copolymer

ABC (linear) triblock copolymer

ABC triblock star

comb

A B

A B C

Block copolymers: designer’s material

Page 12: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

AB Interaction between A, B links.

f A Volume fraction of A links.

N Number of links along a chain.

More parameters will be used if we consider more complicated architectures.

Modeling diblock copolymers

Page 13: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Physics Today, Feb. 1999, p32.

What do we expect to get from diblock copolymer melt?

Page 14: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Principles of pattern selection in block copolymer melt

• F = F(elastic) + F(interfacial)• F(elastic) ~ (domain size)2

• F(interfacial) ~ (domain size)-1

• F(homogeneous) ~ fAfBN• Compare free energy per chain for diff

erent phases.

Page 15: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Phases of diblock copolymer

Page 16: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Self-assembly occurs in other systems, too.

Page 17: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Physics Today, Feb. 1999, p32

What we will see when there are three?

Page 18: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Applications: dots

M. Park, C. Harrison, P.M. Chaikin, R.A. Register, and D.H. Adamson

Science 276, 1401 (1997)

Page 19: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Application: Wires

Thurn-Albrecht, J. Schotter, et al.,

Science 290, 2126 (2000)

Page 20: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

S.O. Kim, et. al., Nature 424, (2003)

Making patterned surface

Page 21: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Polymer “alloys” designed in nanoscale

triblock pentablock

C.Y. Ryu, et al, Macromolecules, 35 9391 (2002)

Page 22: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Nano-particles on droplets

Page 23: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Nonequilibrium dynamics: make nano-machines

• Nonequilibrium: beyond “partition function” physics.

• What is new for motion in “wet” environment, at nm scale?

• Can we utilize these special features?

Page 24: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Navier-Stokes equation and Reynolds number in nm scale

In cgs units: l~10-7, v~10-7, Re<<1. Strongly overdamped motion.

inertia effect viscous effect

Page 25: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

protein folding and protein motors: overdamped, Brownian motion

http://folding.stanford.edu/education/prstruc.html

Science 1999 Nov 26; 286: 1687.

Robert H. Fillingame

Page 26: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

I.M. Janosi et al, Eur. Biophys. J. 27, 501 (1998)

Microtubule: non-equilibrium, self-assembled tracks in cells

Page 27: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Filaments in a cell

http://www.accessexcellence.org/AB/GG/cytoSkeleton.html

Page 28: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

+ - + - + - +

+2 10 nmRev. Mod. Phys. 69, 1269 (1997)

Nano-machines work on the tracks

Brownian motion is important for life.

Page 29: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

R.D. Astumian, Science, 276, 917 (1997)

Application:Particle separation by Brownian motors

Page 30: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Nature 401(1999)

Road to artificial motor

Page 31: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Not very good, not too bad, either.

How are we doing with the artificial motor?

Page 32: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Science 290, (2002)

Nanodevice with natural rotatory motors

Page 33: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

A rotatory motor at work

Page 34: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

How to make structures like this? (inside a cell)

Need to construct simpler model systems to understand pattern formation in systems of this kind.

Page 35: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Leibler 97: quasi-2d experiments

Kinesin “multimers”.

Kinesins move towards “+” ends. Finally they accumulate near the center.

Taxol: control microtubule length and number

Most of the exp were done without taxol.

Page 36: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Leibler 97: aster and vortex

1. Microtubule length: short = aster, long = vortex. 2. Get vortex at late time due to a “buckling instability”.3. Forming aster is not the only possible route leading to the vortex structure.

Page 37: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Leibler 97: large systems

1. Kinesin concentration has important effects on the resulting pattern. (low=vortices, medium=asters, high=bundles)

2. When two asters overlap sufficiently, they can merge. This process may determine final distance between asters.

Page 38: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Leibler 01: One motor result (still 2d)

Kinesin: + end motorNcd: - end motorVortices only seen in kinesin exp

+ end points outward for Ncd + MT (see MT seed in `h’)

Page 39: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Leibler 01: Two motors result

Motor concentration increases Local MT bundles, poles between bundles

Low kinesin/NcdstarsHigh kinesin/Ncd vortices

Kinesin localized in every other pole(+ poles)

Page 40: Nano-soft matter Hsuan-Yi Chen Dept of Physics and Center for Complex Systems, NCU

Summary

• Why “nano”?? Why “soft nano”??• Successful story: self-assembled nano

structures.• Failure: real, nano, artificial machines.• One thing for sure: go study physics h

ard.