Number 561, October 15, 2001
by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein
CO2 Production at the Single-Molecule Level
CO2 production at the single-molecule level has been observed
for a specific chemical reaction. Rather than micromanage (or nanomanage)
compliance of the Kyoto Treaty, this new accomplishment instead offers
fundamental chemical details of CO2 formation which may bring
improvements to automobile emission control, air purification, and chemical
sensing.
Using a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) as a "nanoreactor,"
researchers (Wilson Ho, UC-Irvine, 949-824-5234, wilsonho@uci.edu) studied
the oxidation of a single carbon monoxide (CO) molecule on a metal surface.
In this "catalytic oxidation reaction," CO combines with oxygen
(O) on the surface to form CO2.
Putting CO next to two oxygen atoms on a silver surface, the researchers
found that the CO and O species must be very close to each other to
react. When the CO is at the closest possible distance to an oxygen
atom on the surface, at just 1.78 angstroms away, the researchers saw
that the reactants form an intermediate O-CO-O complex, which has not
been observed to date (see images).
Then, tunneling electrons from the STM tip flow through the CO and O
species to bring the O-CO-O complex to a higher energy state and enable
it to transform into CO2 and a lone oxygen atom. (In a real-world
situation, heat rather than tunneling electrons would spur this transformation.)
In separate experiments investigating another pathway for the same
chemical reaction, the researchers put a CO molecule on the STM tip,
and then positioned it close to an O atom on a silver surface. In this
case, the CO and O loosen their respective bonds to the STM tip and
the silver surface. Eventually, both species are on the surface and
they interact to form CO2. In demonstrating this, they showed
that CO and O don't initially have to be on the surface to form CO2;
the CO can come from above. The researchers also ruled out the idea
that CO reacts with molecular oxygen (O2) on the surface
to form CO2; instead it only reacts with atomic oxygen. (Hahn
and Ho, Physical Review Letters, 15 October 2001.)
Sticky and Slippery Nanobubbles
The presence of bubbles only twenty to thirty nanometers tall appears
to explain why some surfaces can be surprisingly slick or unusually
sticky. The bubbles form on the surface of hydrophobic (water repellent)
materials immersed in water. The stickiness arises as two hydrophobic
surfaces approach one another and the bubbles link them together, leading
to an attractive force with a range related to nanobubble height. Alternatively,
the bubbles can serve as a kind of lubricant by forming a layer that
allows water to slip smoothly over certain materials - such as the hydrophobic
fabric of Olympic swimming suits.
Until recently, however, evidence of nanobubbles has been largely circumstantial
because they are so difficult to detect. The bubbles are too small to
image with light, and too fragile to probe with most contact techniques
that use tiny mechanical probes to measure molecular scale features.
A group at the Ian Wark Research Institute of the University of South
Australia (Phil Attard, phil.attard@unisa.edu.au, 618-8302-3564) has
now obtained the first direct images of nanobubbles on hydrophobic surfaces.
To acquire the images, the researchers gently examined glass surfaces
with a tapping-mode atomic force microscope (AFM), which consisted of
a conventional AFM probe tip attached to a vibrating cantilever that
scanned across samples immersed in water. The groundbreaking images
revealed that nanobubbles form closely packed, irregular networks that
cover hydrophobic surfaces nearly completely, and that the bubbles rapidly
reform after they are disturbed.
The work also seems to have solved a mystery regarding how the miniscule
bubbles can exist at all. Pressure inside a bubble is related to the
curvature of the bubble's surface - the smaller a spherical bubble is,
the higher both the curvature and the pressure must be. High pressures,
however, would cause the trapped gasses to rapidly dissolve into the
surrounding water, and the bubbles should spontaneously disappear. The
tapping-mode AFM resolves this paradox by showing that the nanobubbles
are not round, but flattened like pancakes, with curvature and pressure
much lower than previously expected. (J.
W. G. Tyrrell and P. Attard, Physical Review Letters, 22
October 2001.)
Nobel Prize Addendum
Concerning last week's item on the 2001 physics prize (Update
560), here are a few references to some of the prominent articles
concerning Bose-Einstein condensates published in Physical
Review Letters in recent years: first lithium BEC, Bradley
et al., 28 August 1995; first sodium BEC (Ketterle), Davis
et al., 27 November 1995; first hydrogen BEC, Fried
et al., 2 November 1998; helium BEC, Pereira
Dos Santos et al., 16 April 2001; realization of an atom
laser, Mewes et
al., 27 January 1997; superfluid properties seen in BEC, Onofrio
et al.,11 September 2000; first all-optical BEC, Barrett
et al., 2 July 2001.