Focus on Hierarchical Nanostructures

Figure
Figure. Composite material. Image provided by Zhao Qin.

Guest Editors

Markus Buehler, McAfee Professor of Engineering, MIT
Zhao Qin, Research Scientist, MIT

Scope

Nature produces many example materials with multiple advanced functions - mechanical, thermal, electromagnetic, biological, optical and acoustic - over engineering materials. This is largely due to their complex hierarchical structures, which endow the materials with advanced properties. Many of these multifunctional materials contain nanostructures as their fundamental building blocks which are organized in certain manners via self-assembly guided by external forces, resulting in structures that span many hierarchical levels, and which facilitate the scale-up from the nano to the macroscale.

Advanced manufacture techniques can now precisely control the nanoscale feature of small molecules, but the astounding ability of natural materials to integrate disparate properties, and multiple length-scales, goes far beyond our current ability in designing and synthesizing materials. This special issues will explore scientific advances at this frontier, and explore the analysis, design and making of new functional materials. The special issue will focus on the integration of disparate techniques that range from the atomistic to the macroscale, emphasizing sophisticated controls over hierarchical structures. A special focus will be joint efforts of multidisciplinary techniques that cover innovative synthesis, multiscale modeling and advanced characterization. Studies contributing to material-by-design paradigms provide fruitful resources to enable rational designs of innovative functional materials and generate impacts to broad engineering fields that address major societal challenges and needs.

We hope this issue provides a broad overview of the current state and guidance to the future.

Submission process and deadline for submission

All articles to feature in this Focus Collection are invited contributions, and authors who have agreed to submit should do so by visiting our online submission form.

The deadline for submissions is 31 May 2017. Nanotechnology is able to publish focus collections incrementally. If you submit early in the period your article will not be delayed waiting for other papers in the collection. If you are not able to meet the deadline, please let us know.

Editorial

Hierarchical nanostructures for functional materials

Zhao Qin and Markus J Buehler 2018 Nanotechnology 29 280201

Naturally occurring biomaterials often have amazing functions, such as mechanical, thermal, electromagnetic, biological, optical and acoustic. These superior performances are often due to their hierarchical organizations of natural materials, starting from the nanoscopic scale and extending all the way to the macroscopic level. This topical issue features articles dedicated to understanding, designing and characterizing complex de novo hierarchical materials for a variety of applications. This research area is quickly evolving, and we hope that future work will drive the rational designs of innovative functional materials and generate deep impacts to broad engineering fields that address major societal challenges and needs.

Topical Reviews

DNA-based construction at the nanoscale: emerging trends and applications

P Lourdu Xavier and Arun Richard Chandrasekaran 2018 Nanotechnology 29 062001

The field of structural DNA nanotechnology has evolved remarkably—from the creation of artificial immobile junctions to the recent DNA–protein hybrid nanoscale shapes—in a span of about 35 years. It is now possible to create complex DNA-based nanoscale shapes and large hierarchical assemblies with greater stability and predictability, thanks to the development of computational tools and advances in experimental techniques. Although it started with the original goal of DNA-assisted structure determination of difficult-to-crystallize molecules, DNA nanotechnology has found its applications in a myriad of fields. In this review, we cover some of the basic and emerging assembly principles: hybridization, base stacking/shape complementarity, and protein-mediated formation of nanoscale structures. We also review various applications of DNA nanostructures, with special emphasis on some of the biophysical applications that have been reported in recent years. In the outlook, we discuss further improvements in the assembly of such structures, and explore possible future applications involving super-resolved fluorescence, single-particle cryo-electron (cryo-EM) and x-ray free electron laser (XFEL) nanoscopic imaging techniques, and in creating new synergistic designer materials.

Multiscale assembly of solution-processed organic electronics: the critical roles of confinement, fluid flow, and interfaces

Bijal B Patel and Ying Diao 2018 Nanotechnology 29 044004

Organic semiconducting small molecules and polymers provide a rich phase space for investigating the fundamentals of molecular and hierarchical assembly. Stemming from weak intermolecular interactions, their assembly sensitively depends on processing conditions, which in turn drastically modulate their electronic properties. Much work has gone into molecular design strategies that maximize intermolecular interactions and encourage close packing. Less understood, however, is the non-equilibrium assembly that occurs during the fabrication process (especially solution coating and printing) which is critical to determining thin film morphology across length scales. This encompasses polymorphism and molecular packing at molecular scale, assembly of π-bonding aggregates at the tens of nanometers scale, and the formation of domains at the micron-millimeter device scale. Here, we discuss three phenomena ubiquitous in solution processing of organic electronic thin films: the confinement effect, fluid flows, and interfacial assembly and the role they play in directing assembly. This review focuses on the mechanistic understanding of how assembly outcomes couple closely to the solution processing environment, supported by salient examples from the recent literature.

Papers

Size of graphene sheets determines the structural and mechanical properties of 3D graphene foams

Zhiqiang Shen et al 2018 Nanotechnology 29 104001

Graphene is recognized as an emerging 2D nanomaterial for many applications. Assembly of graphene sheets into 3D structures is an attractive way to enable their macroscopic applications and to preserve the exceptional mechanical and physical properties of their constituents. In this study, we develop a coarse-grained (CG) model for 3D graphene foams (GFs) based on the CG model for a 2D graphene sheet by Ruiz et al (2015 Carbon 82 103–15). We find that the size of graphene sheets plays an important role in both the structural and mechanical properties of 3D GFs. When their size is smaller than 10 nm, the graphene sheets can easily stack together under the influence of van der Waals interactions (vdW). These stacks behave like building blocks and are tightly packed together within 3D GFs, leading to high density, small pore radii, and a large Young's modulus. However, if the sheet sizes exceed 10 nm, they are staggered together with a significant amount of deformation (bending). Therefore, the density of 3D GFs has been dramatically reduced due to the loosely packed graphene sheets, accompanied by large pore radii and a small Young's modulus. Under uniaxial compression, rubber-like stress–strain curves are observed for all 3D GFs. This material characteristic is dominated by the vdW interactions between different graphene layers and slightly affected by the out-of-plane deformation of the graphene sheets. We find a simple scaling law $E\sim {\rho }^{4.2}$ between the density ρ and Young's modulus E for a model of 3D GFs. The simulation results reveal structure–property relations of 3D GFs, which can be applied to guide the design of 3D graphene assemblies with exceptional properties.

Moisture effect on interfacial integrity of epoxy-bonded system: a hierarchical approach

Lik-ho Tam et al 2018 Nanotechnology 29 024001

The epoxy-bonded system has been widely used in various applications across different scale lengths. Prior investigations have indicated that the moisture-affected interfacial debonding is the major failure mode of such a system, but the fundamental mechanism remains unknown, such as the basis for the invasion of water molecules in the cross-linked epoxy and the epoxy-bonded interface. This prevents us from predicting the long-term performance of the epoxy-related applications under the effect of the moisture. Here, we use full atomistic models to investigate the response of the epoxy-bonded system towards the adhesion test, and provide a detailed analysis of the interfacial integrity under the moisture effect and the associated debonding mechanism. Molecular dynamics simulations show that water molecules affect the hierarchical structure of the epoxy-bonded system at the nanoscale by disrupting the film-substrate interaction and the molecular interaction within the epoxy, which leads to the detachment of the epoxy thin film, and the final interfacial debonding. The simulation results show good agreement with the experimental results of the epoxy-bonded system. Through identifying the relationship between the epoxy structure and the debonding mechanism at multiple scales, it is shown that the hierarchical structure of the epoxy-bonded system is crucial for the interfacial integrity. In particular, the available space of the epoxy-bonded system, which consists of various sizes ranging from the atomistic scale to the macroscale and is close to the interface facilitates the moisture accumulation, leading to a distinct interfacial debonding when compared to the dry scenario.

Bending energy penalty enhances the adhesive strength of functional amyloid curli to surfaces

Yao Zhang et al 2017 Nanotechnology 28 464002

The functional amyloid curli fiber, a major proteinaceous component of biofilm extracellular matrices, plays an important role in biofilm formation and enterobacteriaceae adhesion. Curli nanofibers exhibit exceptional underwater adhesion to various surfaces, have high rigidity and strong tensile mechanical properties, and thus hold great promise in biomaterials. The mechanisms of how curli fibers strongly attach to surfaces and detach under force remain elusive. To investigate curli fiber adhesion to surfaces, we developed a coarse-grained curli fiber model, in which the protein subunit CsgA (curli specific gene A) self-assembles into the fiber. The coarse-grained model yields physiologically relevant and tunable bending rigidity and persistence length. The force-induced desorption of a single curli fiber is examined using coarse-grained modeling and theoretical analysis. We find that the bending energy penalty arising from high persistence length enhances the resistance of the curli fiber against desorption and thus strengthens the adhesion of the curli fiber to surfaces. The CsgA-surface adhesion energy and the curli fiber bending rigidity both play crucial roles in the resistance of curli fiber against desorption from surfaces. To enable the desorption process, the applied peeling force must overcome both the interfacial adhesion energy and the energy barrier for bending the curli fiber at the peeling front. We show that the energy barrier to desorption increases with the interfacial adhesion energy, however, the bending induced failure of a single curli fiber limits the work of adhesion if the proportion of the CsgA-surface adhesion energy to the CsgA–CsgA cohesive energy becomes large. These results illustrate that the optimal adhesion performance of nanofibers is dictated by the interplay between bending, surface energy and cohesive energy. Our model provides timely insight into enterobacteriaceae adhesion mechanisms as well as future designs of engineered curli fiber based adhesives.

Line tension effects on the wetting of nanostructures: an energy method

Hao-Yuan Guo et al 2017 Nanotechnology 28 384001

The superhydrophobicity and self-cleaning property of micro/nano-structured solid surfaces require a stable Cassie–Baxter (CB) wetting state at the liquid–solid interface. We present an energy method to investigate how the three-phase line tension affects the CB wetting state on nanostructured materials. For some nanostructures, the line tension may engender a distinct energy barrier, which restricts the position of the three-phase contact line and affects the stability of the CB wetting state. We ascertain the upper and lower limits of the critical pressure at the CB–Wenzel transition. Our results suggest that superhydrophobicity on nanostructures can be modulated by tailoring the line tension and harnessing the curvature effect. This study also provides new insights into the sinking phenomena observed in the nanoparticle-floating experiment.

Local electronic structure and nanolevel hierarchical organization of bone tissue: theory and NEXAFS study

A A Pavlychev et al 2016 Nanotechnology 27 504002

Theoretical and experimental investigations of native bone are carried out to understand relationships between its hierarchical organization and local electronic and atomic structure of the mineralized phase. The 3D superlattice model of a coplanar assembly of the hydroxyapatite (HAP) nanocrystallites separated by the hydrated nanolayers is introduced to account the interplay of short-, long- and super-range order parameters in bone tissue. The model is applied to (i) predict and rationalize the HAP-to-bone spectral changes in the electronic structure and (ii) describe the mechanisms ensuring the link of the hierarchical organization with the electronic structure of the mineralized phase in bone. To check the predictions the near-edge x-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) at the Ca 2p, P 2p and O 1s thresholds is measured for native bone and compared with NEXAFS for reference compounds. The NEXAFS analysis has demonstrated the essential hierarchy induced HAP-to-bone red shifts of the Ca and P 2p-to-valence transitions. The lowest O 1s excitation line at 532.2 eV in bone is assigned with superposition of core transitions in the hydroxide OH(H2O)m anions, Ca2+(H2O)n cations, the carboxyl groups inside the collagen and [PO4]2− and [PO4] anions with unsaturated P–O bonds.