Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Nano car has molecular 4-wheel drive: smallest electric car in the world
11 November 2011 [21:00] - Today.Az
Reduced to the max: the emission-free, noiseless 4-wheel drive car,
jointly developed by Empa researchers and their Dutch colleagues,
represents lightweight construction at its most extreme. The nano car
consists of just a single molecule and travels on four
electrically-driven wheels in an almost straight line over a copper
surface. The "prototype" can be admired on the cover of the latest
edition of Nature.
To carry out mechanical work, one usually turns to engines, which
transform chemical, thermal or electrical energy into kinetic energy in
order to, say, transport goods from A to B. Nature does the same thing;
in cells, so-called motor proteins -- such as kinesin and the muscle
protein actin -- carry out this task. Usually they glide along other
proteins, similar to a train on rails, and in the process "burn" ATP
(adenosine triphosphate), the chemical fuel, so to speak, of the living
world.
A number of chemists aim to use similar principles and concepts to
design molecular transport machines, which could then carry out specific
tasks on the nano scale. According to an article in the latest edition
of science magazine "Nature," scientists at the University of Groningen
and at Empa have successfully taken "a decisive step on the road to
artificial nano-scale transport systems." They have synthesised a
molecule from four rotating motor units, i.e. wheels, which can travel
straight ahead in a controlled manner. "To do this, our car needs
neither rails nor petrol; it runs on electricity. It must be the
smallest electric car in the world -- and it even comes with 4-wheel
drive" comments Empa researcher Karl-Heinz Ernst.
Range per tank of fuel: still room for improvement
The downside: the small car, which measures approximately 4x2
nanometres -- about one billion times smaller than a VW Golf -- needs to
be refuelled with electricity after every half revolution of the wheels
-- via the tip of a scanning tunnelling microscope (STM). Furthermore,
due to their molecular design, the wheels can only turn in one
direction. "In other words: there's no reverse gear," says Ernst, who is
also a professor at the University of Zurich, laconically.
According to its "construction plan" the drive of the complex organic
molecule functions as follows: after sublimating it onto a copper
surface and positioning an STM tip over it leaving a reasonable gap,
Ernst's colleague, Manfred Parschau, applied a voltage of at least 500
mV. Now electrons should "tunnel" through the molecule, thereby
triggering reversible structural changes in each of the four motor
units. It begins with a cis-trans isomerisation taking place at a double
bond, a kind of rearrangement -- in an extremely unfavourable position
in spatial terms, though, in which large side groups fight for space. As
a result, the two side groups tilt to get past each other and end up
back in their energetically more favourable original position -- the
wheel has completed a half turn. If all four wheels turn at the same
time, the car should travel forwards. At least, according to theory
based on the molecular structure.
To drive or not to drive -- a simple question of orientation
And this is what Ernst and Parschau observed: after ten STM
stimulations, the molecule had moved six nanometres forwards -- in a
more or less straight line. "The deviations from the predicted
trajectory result from the fact that it is not at all a trivial matter
to stimulate all four motor units at the same time," explains "test
driver" Ernst.
Another experiment showed that the molecule really does behave as
predicted. A part of the molecule can rotate freely around the central
axis, a C-C single bond -- the chassis of the car, so to speak. It can
therefore "land" on the copper surface in two different orientations: in
the right one, in which all four wheels turn in the same direction, and
in the wrong one, in which the rear axle wheels turn forwards but the
front ones turn backwards -- upon excitation the car remains at a
standstill. Ernst und Parschau were able to observe this, too, with the
STM.
Therefore, the researchers have achieved their first objective, a
"proof of concept," i.e. they have been able to demonstrate that
individual molecules can absorb external electrical energy and transform
it into targeted motion. The next step envisioned by Ernst and his
colleagues is to develop molecules that can be driven by light, perhaps
in the form of UV lasers. /Science Daily/
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