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New way to peek inside crystals is like X-ray vision

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Researchers have created a new way to visualize crystals by looking inside their structures, akin to having X-ray vision.

Their new technique—which they aptly named “Crystal Clear”—combines the use of transparent particles and microscopes with lasers that allow scientists to see each unit that makes up the crystal and to create dynamic three-dimensional models.

“This is a powerful platform for studying crystals,” says Stefano Sacanna, professor of chemistry at New York University and the principal investigator for the study in the journal Nature Materials.

“Previously, if you looked at a colloidal crystal through a microscope, you could only get a sense of its shape and structure of the surface. But we can now see inside and know the position of every unit in the structure.”

Atomic crystals are solid materials whose building blocks are positioned in a repeating, orderly fashion. Every now and then, an atom is missing or out of place, resulting in a defect. The arrangement of atoms and defects is what creates different crystalline materials—from table salt to diamonds—and gives them their properties.

Many scientists, including Sacanna, look to crystals composed of miniscule spheres called colloidal particles rather than atoms. Colloidal particles are tiny—often around a micrometer in diameter, or dozens of times smaller than a human hair—but are much larger than atoms and therefore easier to see under a microscope.

Crystal ‘twinning’

In their ongoing work to understand how colloidal crystals form, the researchers recognized the need to see inside these structures.

Led by Shihao Zang, a PhD student in Sacanna’s lab and the study’s first author, the team set out to create a method to visualize the building blocks inside a crystal. They first developed colloidal particles that were transparent and added dye molecules to label them, making each particle possible to distinguish under a microscope using their fluorescence.

A microscope alone wouldn’t allow the researchers to see inside, so they turned to an imaging technique called confocal microscopy, which uses a laser beam that scans through material to produce targeted fluorescence from the dye molecules.

This reveals each two-dimensional plane of a crystal, which can be stacked on top of each other to build a three-dimensional digital model and identify the location of each particle. The models can be rotated, sliced, and taken apart to look inside and see any defects.

In one set of experiments, the researchers used this imaging method on crystals that form when two of the same type grow together—a phenomenon known as “twinning.” When they looked inside models having structures equivalent to table salt or an alloy of copper and gold, they could see the shared plane of the adjoined crystals, a defect that gives rise to these particular shapes. This shared plane revealed the molecular origin of twinning.

Static and dynamic

In addition to looking at static crystals, this new technique allows scientists to visualize crystals as they change. For example, what happens when they melt—do particles rearrange, and do defects move?

In an experiment in which the researchers melted a crystal with the structure of the mineral salt cesium chloride, they were surprised to find that the defects were stable and did not move around as expected.

In order to validate their experiments on static and dynamic crystals, the team also used computer simulations to create crystals with the same characteristics, confirming that their method accurately captured what is inside crystals.

“In a sense, we’re trying to put our own simulations out of business with this experiment—if you can see inside the crystal, you may not need simulations anymore,” jokes Glen Hocky, assistant professor of chemistry, a faculty member in the Simons Center for Computational Physical Chemistry, and the study’s co-corresponding author.

Now that scientists have a method for visualizing the inside of crystals, they can more easily study their chemical history and how they form, which could pave the way for building better crystals and developing photonic materials that interact with light.

“Being able to see inside crystals gives us greater insight into how the crystallization process works and can perhaps help us to optimize the process of growing crystals by design,” Sacanna says.

Adam Hauser and Sanjib Paul of NYU are coauthors of the paper.

The US Army Research Office funded the work, with additional support from the National Institute of Health. The researchers used NYU IT High Performance Computing resources, including those supported by the Simons Center for Computational Physical Chemistry at NYU.

Source: NYU

  • Tiny crystals could slash the cost of X-rays
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    Spongy crystals grab drinkable water from thin air

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    Highly absorbent materials called metal-organic frameworks can extract drinkable water out of thin air, research finds.

    The discovery could potentially lead to technologies that supply potable water to the driest areas on the planet. For many of the world’s poor, one of the greatest environmental threats to health remains lack of access to safe water.

    The new research leverages metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), materials with the largest known surface areas per gram. A single gram of the MOF can soak up a football field’s worth of material, when the material is in a single layer across the field.

    The sponge-like crystals can capture, store, and release chemical compounds—like water—and the large surface area offers more space for chemical reactions and adsorption of molecules, the researchers say.

    MOFs have shown promise for water harvesting, but researchers have done little to determine the best properties for fast and efficient production of water.

    “Initial experiments have proved that the concept can work,” says Zhiyong Xia from Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory. “But the problem has been capacity.

    “Other research teams have been able to produce as much as about 1.3 liters of water per day per kilogram of sorbent under arid conditions—enough only for one person. To create an optimal water-harvesting device requires a better understanding of the structure property relationship controlling absorption and delivery.”

    Xia and his team studied a series of MOFs—unraveling the fundamental material properties that govern the kinetics of water sequestration in this class of materials as well as investigating how much water they can absorb. They also explored the potential impact of temperature, humidity, and powder bed thickness on the adsorption-desorption process to see which one achieved optimal operational parameters.

    “We identified a MOF that could produce 8.66 liters of water per day per kilogram of MOF under ideal conditions, an extraordinary finding.” Xia says. “This will help us deepen our understanding of these materials and guide the discovery of next-generation water-harvesting methods.”

    The researchers are now exploring other MOFs with low relative humidity influx points, high surface areas, and polar functional properties to see how they perform in very dry environments. They are also exploring different configurations of MOFs to determine which allow for optimal absorption.

    The researchers drew on APL’s ongoing efforts in water purification methods. APL has developed a new way to remove highly toxic perfluoroalkyl substances—an ever-expanding group of manufactured chemicals widely used to make various types of everyday products—from drinking water. A separate effort yielded a cost-effective method to remove toxic heavy metal ions from drinking water.

    “Our scientists’ and engineers’ collective strengths and expertise in materials and chemistry have positioned APL to make extraordinary impact and invent the future of clean drinking water for deployed warfighters, as well as for citizens around the world,” says Ally Bissing-Gibson, APL’s Biological and Chemical Sciences program manager. “We look forward to saving the planet, one drop at a time.”

    Source: Johns Hopkins University