programming matter - science in the...

23
Programming Matter Smart Surfaces, Molecular Machines, and Invisibility Cloaks Lauren Zarzar Nicholas Schade Adam Marblestone

Upload: others

Post on 23-May-2020

3 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Programming MatterSmart Surfaces, Molecular Machines,

and Invisibility Cloaks

Lauren ZarzarNicholas SchadeAdam Marblestone

Page 2: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Outline for the Evening

• Lauren Zarzar – Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels

• Nicholas Schade – Controlling the way matter interacts with light

• Adam Marblestone – Building tiny molecular machines using DNA

Page 3: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Programming Matter• Programming smart

surfaces with hydrogels

• Guiding the path taken by light

O. Hess, Nature,

2008

O. Hess, Nature,

2008

Why does the straw look bent?Which picture shows real water?

10 micron

Page 4: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

How can we program matter to be an invisibility cloak?

LiquidGhoul – Wikimedia Commons

Sundae2Sundae– Wikimedia Commons

“Cloak”

Goal: invisible from all viewing angles; no shadow

Page 5: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Light travels as a wave

Courtesy of Prof. Andrew DavidhazySchool of Photo Arts and Sciences/RIT – Rochester, NY 14623

Crest

Trough

Wavelength determines color of light

Wavelength

Wave fronts

Ripples: “wave fronts”

Light rays

Lykaestria: Wikimedia Commons

Page 6: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Human

Ant

Hair

Cells

Atomic Scale

Microscale

Virus

Width of DNA

Atom

Macroscale

Nanoscale

met

ers

10-1

10-2

10-3

10-4

10-5

10-6

10-7

10-8

10-9

10-10

Developed for the NISE Network with funding from the National Science Foundation under Award Numbers 0532536 and 0940143. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this product are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Foundation.

Wavelength

700 nm

400 nm

500 nm

600 nm

InfraredInfrared

MicrowavesMicrowaves

Visible light

Visible light

Philip Ronan – Wikimedia Commons

D-Kuru – Wikimedia Commons

Page 7: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Kieff: Wikimedia Commons Questions so far?

D-Kuru – Wikimedia Commons

Page 8: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

How do we see objects?

Lykaestria: Wikimedia Commons

Light source

LiquidGhoul – Wikimedia Commons

Object

Observer

Opaque objects absorb some colors of light and reflect others

Petar Milošević – Wikimedia Commons

What about transparent objects that light can pass through?

Page 9: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

We can see transparent objects easily if they bend light

Light may change direction at surfaces between materials, creating distorted images

Petar Milošević – Wikimedia Commons

The straw looks bent but we know it isn’t, so we can tell there is water in the glass

Page 10: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

LiquidGhoul, Sundae2Sundae– Wikimedia Commons

For invisibility, all light rays should resume their original directions

What’s the difference between transparency and invisibility?

Mila Zincova – Wikimedia Commons

Transparent objects bend light, creating distorted images

Page 11: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Invisibility requires guiding light around an object

J. Pendry, et al., Science, 2006

Incominglight

Outgoinglight

Cloak

Chamber at center doesn’t interact

with light

Light sourceLight source

LiquidGhoul – Wikimedia Commons

Page 12: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

What else could we do if we could guide waves arbitrarily?

Questions so far?

“Super lens” for perfect imaging

N. Fang, et al., Science, 2005

Light harvesting

A. Aubry, et al., Nano Letters, 2007

Captured light

Other types of cloaking

Building

Ground

Seismic cloak

Air

S. Kim & M. P. Das, in preparation

Page 13: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

R. A. Shelby, et al.,

Science, 2001

How do we program the way light and matter interact?

Meta-material: a synthetic substance programmed to interact with waves differently than natural materials

The structures in a meta-material must be smaller than the wavelength of light that you want to manipulate

“meta” = “beyond” beyond the properties of natural materials!

Page 14: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

The world’s first invisibility cloak!D. Schurig, et al., Science, 2006

Designed for 3.5 cm wavelength(microwaves)!

3.5 cm3.5 cm

Page 15: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Can we do this for visible light?

Enkrich, et al., Advanced Materials, 2005

• Flat

• Expensive

• Limited precision

Need structures smaller than 100 nm!How would we make them?

Tiny particles

Sheet of material

Nano-structure

Page 16: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Self-assembly: designing things that build themselves

Soup of building blocks

1.2 µm (diameter) spherical particles

Arbitrary 3D structures

Mix, wait

Questions?

Page 17: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Building structures for meta-materials using self-assembly

160 nm

Gold nanoshells

H. Wang, et al., Acc. Chem. Res.,© 2007 American Chemical Society

Glass

130 nmGold plating Gold nanoshell

Thicker shells

J. A. Fan, et al., Science, 2010

Trimer

Self-assembly

Page 18: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Can we find a way to self-assemble tetramers in bulk?

Tetramer Tetrahedron

“Tetra” = 4

How can we make this?

Ideal for super lens!

N. Fang, et al.,Science, 2005

DTR: Wikimedia Commons

Page 19: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Assembly using big and small particles that stick to each other

Chemical polymer “glue”

Page 20: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Sphere size ratio determines cluster sizes

x = 3

Dbig

Dsmallx =

Dbig

Dsmall

x = 7x =1

Big sphere is x times wider than small sphere

Page 21: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

With the right sphere sizes, nearly all clusters are tetramers!

Collaborators:Miranda C. Holmes-CerfonElizabeth R. ChenDina AronzonJesse W. CollinsJonathan A. FanFederico CapassoVinothan N. Manoharan

x =1+ 2

Critical size ratio:

Next challenge is to do this with gold nanoparticles to build useful meta-materials

Acknowledgments

Page 22: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

RecapControlling the path taken by light requires new materials containing tiny synthetic structures

Self-assembly is one way we are trying to build such a material for visible light

Page 23: Programming Matter - Science in the Newssitn.hms.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/...Programming Matter •Programming smart surfaces with hydrogels •Guiding the path taken

Coming up after the break

DNA

Adam MarblestoneBuilding tiny molecular machines using DNA