DocumentCode
1213417
Title
Proximal Probes Based Nanorobotic Drawing of Polymer Micro/Nanofibers
Author
Nain, Amrinder Singh ; Amon, Cristina ; Sitti, Metin
Author_Institution
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA
Volume
5
Issue
5
fYear
2006
Firstpage
499
Lastpage
510
Abstract
This paper proposes a nanorobotic fiber fabrication method which uses proximal probes to draw polymer fibers down to few hundred nanometers in diameter and several hundred micrometers in length. Using proximal probes such as Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) and Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM) or glass micropipettes, liquid polymers dissolved in a solvent are drawn. During drawing, the solvent evaporates in real-time which solidifies the fiber. Controlling the drawn fibers trajectory and solidification in three-dimensions (3-D), suspended fibers, fiber cantilevers, custom 3-D fibers, and fiber networks, are proposed to be fabricated. Poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) polymer dissolved in chlorobenzene is used to form a variety of suspended polymer fibers with diameters from few microns to 200nm. Fabrication of crossed and linear networks of fibers is also demonstrated. Viscoelastic modeling of polymer fiber drawing is realized using a finite element method to test the significance of the drawing speed and velocity profile on the extensional behavior of the drawn fiber. Since the mechanical properties of the drawn micro/nanofibers could vary from the bulk polymer material significantly, mechanical characterization of suspended fibers using an AFM and a Nanoindenter setup is proposed. Extending this technique to a variety of nonconductive and electroactive polymer fibers, many novel applications in micro/nanoscale sensors, actuators, fibrillar structures, and optical and electronic devices would become possible
Keywords
atomic force microscopy; drawing (mechanical); finite element analysis; indentation; nanostructured materials; polymer fibres; polymer solutions; scanning tunnelling microscopy; solidification; viscoelasticity; AFM; PMMA; STM; atomic force microscopy; electronic devices; fiber cantilevers; fibrillar structures; finite element method; glass micropipettes; integrated circuit chip packaging; liquid polymers; micro-nanoscale sensors; nanoindenter; nanorobotic drawing; nanorobotic fiber fabrication; optical devices; poly(methyl methacrylate); polymer micro-nanofibers; scanning tunneling microscopy; solidification; viscoelastic modeling; Atomic force microscopy; Fabrication; Optical devices; Optical fiber devices; Optical fiber sensors; Optical fiber testing; Optical polymers; Optical sensors; Probes; Solvents; Nanomanipulation; nanorobotics; polymer micro/nanofibers; proximal probes;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nanotechnology, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-125X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNANO.2006.880453
Filename
1695948
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