News from the NNI Community - Research Advances Funded by Agencies Participating in the NNI

Date Published
(Funded by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation)

Researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Vanderbilt University have engineered silicon nanowires that can convert sunlight into electricity by splitting water into oxygen and hydrogen gas, a greener alternative to fossil fuels. The silicon nanowires have multiple solar cells along their axis so that they could produce the power needed to split water.

(Funded by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of Defense, and the National Institutes of Health)

Researchers from The George Washington University, Virginia Tech, the United States Naval Academy, and The University of Texas at Austin have engineered a new nanomaterial that can boost the potency of common disinfectants. The researchers showed that when the nanomaterial is mixed with a peroxide-based disinfectant, the disinfectant is two-to-four times more effective in disabling a coronavirus strain, compared to when the disinfectant is used alone.

(Funded by the National Science Foundation)

Scientists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst have invented a nanowire that can be cheaply grown by common bacteria and tuned to "smell" a vast array of chemical tracers – including those given off by people with different medical conditions, such as asthma and kidney disease. Thousands of these nanowires, each sniffing out a different chemical, can be layered onto tiny, wearable sensors, allowing health-care providers an unprecedented tool for monitoring potential health complications. 

(Funded by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation)

A team of researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the University of California, Berkeley, and Cornell University has captured real-time movies of copper nanoparticles as they convert carbon dioxide and water into renewable fuels and chemicals – ethylene, ethanol, and propanol, among others. The work was made possible by combining a new imaging technique called operando 4D electrochemical liquid-cell STEM (scanning transmission electron microscopy) with a soft X-ray probe to investigate the same sample environment: copper nanoparticles in liquid.  

(Funded by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Defense)

Researchers at Rice University have used their flash Joule heating technique to turn plastic into valuable carbon nanotubes and hybrid nanomaterials. The plastic, which does not need to be sorted or washed as in traditional recycling, is “flashed” at temperatures over 3,100 kelvins (about 5,120 degrees Fahrenheit). “Recycling plastic costs more than just producing new plastic,” said Kevin Wyss, a Rice graduate student and lead author of the study. “That's why we turned to upcycling, or turning low-value waste materials into something with a higher monetary or use value.” A lifecycle analysis of the production process revealed that flash Joule heating was considerably more energy-efficient and environmentally friendly than existing nanotube production processes.

(Funded by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Defense)

Scientists at Rice University have created carbon nanotubes and other hybrid nanomaterials out of plastic waste using an energy-efficient, low-cost, low-emissions process that could also be profitable. "Waste plastic is rarely recycled because it costs a lot of money to do all the washing, sorting, and melting down of the plastics to turn it into a material that can be used by a factory," said Kevin Wyss, the lead author on the study. "We were able to make a hybrid carbon nanomaterial that outperformed both graphene and commercially available carbon nanotubes.”

(Funded in part by the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Department of Energy, and the National Science Foundation)

Physicists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the National Institute for Materials Science in Tsukuba, Japan, have directly measured the fluid-like flow of electrons in graphene – an atom-thick sheet of #carbon arranged in a honeycomb pattern – at nanometer resolution for the first time. The researchers used a technique known as scanning tunneling potentiometry (STP) and graphene. They intentionally introduced obstacles in the graphene sheet (spaced at controlled distances) and then applied a current across the sheet. Using STP, they measured the voltage with nanometer resolution at all points on the graphene, producing a two-dimensional map of the electron flow pattern.

(Funded in part by the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Department of Energy, and the National Science Foundation)

Researchers from The Ohio State University, the University of Texas at Dallas, and the National Institute for Materials Science in Tsukuba, Japan, have shown that quantum geometry plays a key role in allowing graphene, when twisted to a precise angle – called the magic angle – to become a superconductor, moving electricity with no loss of energy. In a conventional metal, high-speed electrons are responsible for conductivity. But twisted bilayer graphene has a type of electronic structure in which the electrons move very slowly – in fact, at a speed that approaches zero if the angle is exactly at the magic one. "We can't use the speed of electrons to explain how the twisted bilayer graphene is working," said Marc Bockrath, one of the scientists involved in this study. "Instead, we had to use quantum geometry."

(Funded by the National Science Foundation)

Chemists at Northwestern University have designed a new photonic lattice with properties never before seen in nature. In solid materials, atoms must be equally spaced apart and close enough together to interact effectively. The new architectures are based on stacked lattices of nanoparticles that show interactions across unprecedentedly large distances. Because the nanoparticles can communicate across ultralong distances, the stacked architecture offers potential applications in remote sensing and detection. “This is an entirely new class of engineered materials that have no counterpart or analogue in nature," said Teri Odom, a senior author of the study.

(Funded by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation)

Scientists at the University of Pennsylvania have developed a lipid nanoparticle that can target and deliver messenger RNA (mRNA) to cells in the placenta. Once these cells receive the mRNA, they create vascular endothelial growth factor, a protein that helps expand the blood vessels in the placenta to reduce the mother's blood pressure and restore adequate circulation to the fetus. The researchers' successful trials in mice may lead to promising treatments for preeclampsia in humans. "This treatment would be administered intravenously,” said Kelsey Swingle, the lead author on this study. “That means a pregnant woman would be able to be treated via a simple, non-invasive, and pain-free IV drip."