The art of kirigami involves cutting paper into intricate designs, like snowflakes. Cornell University physicists are kirigami artists, too, but their paper is only an atom thick, and could become some of the smallest machines the world has ever known.
A research collaboration led by Paul McEuen, the John A. Newman Professor of Physical Science and director of the Kavli Institute at Cornell for Nanoscale Science (KIC), is taking kirigami down to the nanoscale. Their template is graphene, single atom-thick sheets of hexagonally bonded carbon, famous for being ultra-thin, ultra-strong, and a perfect electron conductor. In the journal Nature, they demonstrate the application of kirigami on 10-micron sheets of graphene (a human hair is about 70 microns thick), which they can cut, fold, twist, and bend, just like paper.
Graphene and other thin materials are extremely sticky at that scale, so the researchers used an old trick to make it easier to manipulate: They suspended it in water and added surfactants to make it slippery, like soapy water. They also made gold tab “handles” so they could grab the ends of the graphene shapes. Co-author Arthur Barnard, also a Cornell physics graduate student, figured out how to manipulate the graphene this way.
The study’s first author, Melina Blees, a former physics graduate student and now a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Chicago, says she received an “enthusiastic welcome” from the Department of Art, where the researchers spent time in the library studying paper and fabric designs and dreaming up ways to translate them to graphene.
They borrowed a laser cutter from the College of Architecture, Art and Planning shop, creating paper models of their designs, before hiking over to the Cornell NanoScale Science and Technology Facility to fabricate them out of graphene.
“It was really true exploration, cutting things out of paper and playing with them, trying to imagine how a ‘hanging kirigami mobile for kids’ could become a nanoscale spring for measuring forces or interacting with cells,” Blees says.
With one sheet of graphene, for example, they made a soft spring, which works just like a very flexible transistor. The forces needed to bend such a spring would be comparable to forces a motor protein might exert, McEuen says. Entering the realm of biological forces, the experiments open up a new playground of ideas for, say, flexible, nanoscale devices that could be placed around human cells or in the brain for sensing, McEuen says.
The researchers also demonstrated how well graphene bends in a simple hinge design, quantifying the forces needed. Opening and closing the hinge 10,000 times, they found that it remains perfectly intact and elastic — a potentially useful quality for foldable machines and devices at that scale.
Building on the principles from the paper, a related research team at Cornell has just received Department of Defense funding to continue developing technologies around flexible materials like graphene, using some of the kirigami principles demonstrated.
Blees adds that over the course of the project, she was able to get an intuitive grasp of graphene’s properties — rare for nanoscale scientists.
“It’s one thing to read about how strong graphene is; it’s another thing entirely to crumple it up and watch it recover, or to stretch a spring dramatically without tearing the materials,” she says. “It’s not every day that you get to develop a feel for a nanoscale material, the way an artist would.”
The work, which also included David Muller, professor of applied and engineering physics and co-director of KIC, was supported by the Cornell Center for Materials Research, which is funded by the National Science Foundation; the Office of Naval Research; and the Kavli Institute at Cornell for Nanoscale Science.
Release Date: July 29, 2015
Source: Cornell University