Electrical response overlaid on the newly characterized organic molecular crystal. Credit: Jiangyu Li, University of Washington |
Organic molecules are molecules that contain carbon. Carbon is a versatile atom and can attach easily to other atoms (forming 4 covalent bonds). The science of designing, synthesizing, characterizing, and developing applications for molecules that contain carbon is called organic chemistry.
Organic molecules are often associated with living things but for organic compounds this is not necessarily the case. The term comes from the old belief that certain compounds and molecules require a "life-force" of a living thing to be generated. The belief has been discredited but the term still remains.
Organic chemistry applications range from the medical to the industrial. One role of organic chemists is to synthesize and develop new molecules that will address a problem or enhance a product.
Synthetic organic compounds usually carry properties that enhance a process, mitigate or address a design/process flaw, or solve a problem. Most of these applications can be seen in pharmaceutical and consumer products.
Organic Compounds and Computer Hardware
At the heart of computing are tiny crystals that transmit and store digital information's ones and zeroes. Today these are hard and brittle materials. But cheap, flexible, nontoxic organic molecules may play a role in the future of hardware.
A team led by the University of Washington in Seattle and the Southeast University in China discovered a molecule that shows promise as an organic alternative to today's silicon-based semiconductors. The findings, published this week in the journal Science, display properties that make it well suited to a wide range of applications in memory, sensing and low-cost energy storage.
"This molecule is quite remarkable, with some of the key properties that are comparable with the most popular inorganic crystals," said co-corresponding author Jiangyu Li, a UW associate professor of mechanical engineering.
The new carbon-based material could offer even cheaper ways to store digital information; provide a flexible, nontoxic material for medical sensors that would be implanted in the body; and create a cheaper, lighter material to harvest energy from natural vibrations.
The new molecule is a ferroelectric, meaning it is positively charged on one side and negatively charged on the other, where the direction can be flipped by applying an electrical field. Synthetic ferroelectrics are now used in some displays, sensors and memory chips.
In the study the authors pitted their new molecule against barium titanate, a long-known ferroelectric material that is a standard for performance. Barium titanate is a ceramic crystal and contains titanium; it has largely been replaced in industrial applications by better-performing but lead-containing alternatives.
Video: Organic Molecules
The new molecule holds its own against the standard-bearer. It has a natural polarization, a measure of how strongly the molecules align to store information, of 23, compared to 26 for barium titanate. To Li's knowledge this is the best organic ferroelectric discovered to date.
A recent study in Nature announced an organic ferroelectric that works at room temperature. By contrast, this molecule retains its properties up to 153 degrees Celsius (307 degrees F), even higher than for barium titanate.
The new molecule also offers a full bag of electric tricks. Its dielectric constant – a measure of how well it can store energy – is more than 10 times higher than for other organic ferroelectrics. And it's also a good piezoelectric, meaning it's efficient at converting movement into electricity, which is useful in sensors.
The new molecule is made from bromine, a natural element isolated from sea salt, mixed with carbon, hydrogen and nitrogen (its full name is diisopropylammonium bromide). Researchers dissolved the elements in water and evaporated the liquid to grow the crystal. Because the molecule contains carbon, it is organic, and pivoting chemical bonds allow it to flex.
The molecule would not replace current inorganic materials, Li said, but it could be used in applications where cost, ease of manufacturing, weight, flexibility and toxicity are important.
Li is working on a number of projects relating to ferroelectricity. Last year he and his graduate student found the first evidence for ferroelectricity in soft animal tissue. He was co-author on a 2011 paper in Science that documents nanometer-scale switching in ferroelectric films, showing how such molecules could be used to store digital information.
"Ferroelectrics are pretty remarkable materials," Li said. "It allows you to manipulate mechanical energy, electrical energy, optics and electromagnetics, all in a single package."
He is working to further characterize this new molecule and explore its combined electric and mechanical properties. He also plans to continue the search for more organic ferroelectrics.
RELATED LINKS
University of Washington
Science
Southeast University in China
Non-Volatile Ferroelectric Memory Developed To Address Upkeep of Cloud Computing
Hybrid Quantum Dot-Superconducting Resonator Device Developed For Quantum Computers
Qubit On A Silicon Based Transistor For Quantum Computing Developed
New Development in Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED) Production
Biohybrid Solar Cell Based On Spinach Delivers Optimum Electrical Power
Newly Discovered Criegee Biradicals Shown to Naturally Cool The Planet
MIT News - Studying Screw Dislocation on Iron Crystal Lattice To Understand Stress, Impacts and Fractures In Materials
From Fuel Cell to Fuel Tank - Studying How To Maximize Efficiency of Hydrogen as an Alternative Fuel
To Commemorate 2012 London Olympics, Smallest Five Ringed Structure Olympicene Produced and Imaged
Nanotechnology Electric Car Made From One Molecule
New Low Cost And Effective Dye Sensitized Solar Cells Being Developed For Cheap Readily Available Solar Energy