Now, engineers from the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) and
the University of Pittsburgh have designed so
-called nanomotors that can autonomously detect and move toward these scratches before wedging themselves into the cracks. [Video: Watch the Nanomotors in Action as They Heal a Scratch]
-called nanomotors that can autonomously detect and move toward these scratches before wedging themselves into the cracks. [Video: Watch the Nanomotors in Action as They Heal a Scratch]
Because the particles are made from gold and
platinum, which conduct electricity, they bridge the gap — healing the
wound — and complete the circuit again, according to the researchers.
The nanomotors are applied in a liquid solution that also contains the
hydrogen peroxide fuel that powers them.
Tiny particles found in the blood of mammals called platelets inspired
the design of the system, said the scientists, who presented their
research at the 251st National Meeting & Exposition of the American
Chemical Society, on Sunday (March 13). These platelets clump together
at the site of a wound to form clots that stem bleeding and help the
wound heal.
To build the nanomotors, the researchers first created tiny gold spheres
and coated one-half of each sphere with platinum, which acts as a
catalyst to break down the fuel that propels them. [Top 10 Inventions that Changed the World]
Then, the gold hemispheres were specially modified to take advantageof the hydrophobic effect — the phenomenon that causes oil droplets to separate from water and merge together.
The cracks in electrical circuits are typically hydrophobic, so by
making the particles hydrophobic too, the researchers were able to nudge
the particles to naturally seek out scratches. The tiny particles are
also drawn to other nanomotors, thus allowing them to form clusters that
can bridge larger gaps in a circuit.
In the study presented at the meeting, and published last September,
lead author Jinxing Li, a doctoral candidate in the UCSD Department of
Nanoengineering, and his colleagues described how they had demonstrated
that the system could repair a deliberately damaged circuit consisting
of a gold electrode, a direct power source and a red LED, within 30
minutes.
According to Li, electronics' ability to self-heal could be particularly useful for solar panels,
which are often placed in remote and hostile environments, as well as
for future flexible electronics integrated into things like clothes that
will experience a lot of mechanical stress.
"These are extremely small nanoscale particles for precision repairing,
so they should save a lot of costs compared to using conventional
soldering," Li told LiveScience. "The next step is to investigate how to
integrate these nanomotors into electronic systems for on-demand
activation."
Previous research into self-healing electronics generally has focused on
creating self-healing materials that conduct electricity and can become
integral parts of a circuit. For instance, Guihua Yu, an assistant
professor of mechanical engineering at
the University of Texas, and his team created a self-healing,
conducting gel designed to act as a soft joint on circuit junctions,
where breakages often occur.
"The nanomotors described in this study are more like a repairing tool
outside the electronics," Yu told Live Science. "People can use the
nanomotors to repair the cracks in circuits just like they use concrete
to fix cracks on a wall."
But he said the need to create a designed chemical environment at the
site of damage by adding fuel along with the nanomotors could make it
challenging to integrate the new technology in electronic s. A fully
autonomous self-healing system would need to be able to sense when
damage occurs and apply the nanomotors and fuel to the correct area..
"This poses a limitation in terms of how they can be applied to
versatile electronic systems, and how they can be easily incorporated
into circuits to do the self-healing work," Yu added.
The system relies primarily on materials traditionally used in
electronics, and it does not matter how much time has passed since the
damage to the circuit occurred, the UCSD researchers said.
The approach could also have applications outside electronics, Li said.
In 2013, a group from Pennsylvania State University revealed a similar
system that used the ion gradients caused by the minerals released when a
bone breaks to power and direct drug-carrying nanoparticles to the site
of the crack.
Li said their approach could be used for a similar purpose, and they
have already demonstrated that they can power nanomotors using gastric
acid, or even water, as fuel.
"The concept demonstrated here could have a profound impact on medicine
delivery," Li said. "We would like to develop nanoscale medicine
shuttles, which could swim and detect disease sites next. For example,
we can modify nanomotors with antibodies on the surface and use them to
swim and target tumors."
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