Number 648, July 31, 2003
by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein, and James Riordon
A Water Molecule's Chemical Formula is Really
Not H2O
A water molecule's chemical formula is really not H2O,
at least from the perspective of neutrons and electrons interacting
with the molecule for only attoseconds (1 attosecond=10-18
seconds). According to new and recent experiments, neutrons and electrons
colliding with water for just attoseconds will see a ratio of hydrogen
to oxygen of roughly 1.5 to 1, so a more accurate formula for water
under these circumstances would be H1.5O. According
to the experimenters (Aris Chatzidimitriou-Dreismann, Technical University-Berlin,
dreismann@chem.TU-Berlin.de,
011-49-30-314-22692), this "opening of the attosecond time window"
may be revealing dramatic quantum effects that were once too short-lived
to catch. Nonetheless, such effects may revise conventional textbook
notions of water and other everyday molecules. Moreover, these experiments
can provide new insights on chemical reactions at the 100-500 attosecond
scale: the neutron and electron probes break apart the chemical bonds
in molecules, as compared to laser-based attosecond studies, which have
just ejected electrons from atoms at this point.
The story begins in 1995. At the ISIS neutron spallation facility
in the UK, a German-British collaboration collided epithermal neutrons
(those with energies of up to a few hundred electron volts) with a target
that included water molecules (Chatzidimitriou-Dreismann
et al., Physical Review Letters, 13 October 1997).
Detecting the number and energy loss of the scattered neutrons in the
resulting attosecond-scale collisions, the researchers noticed that
neutrons were scattering from 25% fewer protons than expected. Apparently,
the protons in hydrogen were sometimes "invisible" to the
neutron probes. While the exact details are still being debated by theorists,
the researchers' own theoretical considerations suggest the presence
of short-lived (sub-femtosecond) entanglement, in which protons in adjacent
hydrogen atoms (and possibly the surrounding electrons) are all interlinked
in such a way as to change the nature of the scattering results. Realizing
that water itself has anomalous properties, the researchers repeated
the neutron experiments in other more typical molecules, for instance
in benzene (conventionally noted as C6H6). In
that case, they found that the neutrons saw a ratio of hydrogen to carbon
of 4.5 to 6! Meanwhile, this effect was also confirmed in various hydrogen-containing
metals, in a collaboration with Uppsala University in Sweden. Now, the
researchers (with new colleagues in Australia) have decided to use an
independent experimental method to verify this effect. In experiments
at Australian National University in Canberra, the researchers used
electron probes instead of neutrons, as the two particles interact with
protons via fundamentally different forces (strong and electromagnetic
interactions). Scattering electrons from a solid polymer called formvar
(with basic building block C8H14O2),
they observed the exact same shortfall in scattered electrons from hydrogen
nuclei, comparable to the shortfall of scattered neutrons in accompanying
neutron experiments on the same polymer. This supports the earlier results
on water and other systems. (Chatzidimitriou-Dreismann
et al., Physical Review Letters, 1 August 2003)
A Nanoscopic Thermometer
A nanoscopic thermometer, consisting of a magnesium oxide nanotube
filled with gallium metal, may dramatically increase the temperature
range of tiny thermometers. Researchers at the National Institute for
Materials Sciences (contact: Prof. Yoshio Bando, phone number +81-29-860-4426;
bando.yoshio@nims.go.jp)
announced the creation of a carbon nanotube thermometer last year, but
the device had at least one shortcoming: nanoscopic carbon tubes rapidly
degrade in air at temperatures of 600-700 degrees Celsius. The new nanotubes
are made of magnesium oxide cylinders with inner diameters of 20-60
nanometers, or about a thousandth the thickness of a human hair. Magnesium
oxide nanotubes, in contrast to carbon versions, can withstand high
temperatures. Often, there is a gap in a nanotube's gallium filling,
and because gallium expands as it's heated, the temperature of the thermometer
is read out by measuring changes in the gap between the two portions
of the metal. The tiny thermometers are expected to function well up
to about 1000 degrees Celsius. Eventually, miniature thermometers such
as these could be important for measuring temperature in the vicinity
of nanoscopic motors and other tiny devices. (Y.B.
Li, Y. Bando, D. Golberg, and Z.W. Liu, Applied Physics Letters,
4 August 2003)