Rice
University will roll up for the second international Nanocar Race with a new
vehicle. The one-molecule car has a permanent dipole that makes it easier to
control.
Courtesy: Alexis van Venrooy/Rice University.
Nanomechanics
at Rice University and the University of Houston are getting ready to rev their
engines for the second international Nanocar Race.
While
they'll have to pump the brakes for a bit longer than expected, as the race has
been bumped a year to 2022, the Rice-based team is pushing forward with new
designs introduced in the American Chemical Society's Journal of Organic
Chemistry.
The work
led by chemists James Tour of Rice and Anton Dubrovskiy of the University of
Houston-Clear Lake upgrades the cars with wheels of tert-butyl that should help
them navigate the course laid out on a surface of gold, with pylons consisting
of a few well-placed atoms.
Like their
winning entry in 2017's first international Nanocar Race, these nanocars have
permanent dipole moments to increase their speed and drivability on the
surface.
"The
permanent dipoles make the cars more susceptible to being influenced by
electric field gradients, which are used to propel and maneuver them,"
Tour said. "It is a feature we introduced for the first competition, and
I'm sure many of the entries will now have this advanced design element built
into their nanocars."
This
year's models are also lighter, a little more than the minimum 100 atoms
required by new regulations. "The car we used in the first race had only
50 atoms," Tour said. "So this is a substantial increase in the
molecular weight, as required by the updated standards."It's likely the
race organizers wanted to slow us down since the last time, when we finished
the 30-hour race in only 1.5 hours," he said.
To bring
the cars past 100 atoms while streamlining their syntheses, the researchers
used a modular process to make five new cars with either all tert-butyl, all
adamantyl wheels (as in previous nanocars) or combinations of the two.
At 90
atoms, cars with only butyl wheels, which minimize interactions with the track,
and shorter chassis were too small. By using wheel combinations, the Rice lab
made nanocars with 114 atoms. "This keeps the weight at a minimum while
meeting the race requirements," Tour said.
The
nanocars will again be driven by a team from University of Graz in Austria led
by Professor Leonhard Grill. The team brought the Rice vehicle across the
finish line in 2017 and has enormous expertise in scanning tunneling
microscope-directed manipulations, Tour said. The Grill and Tour groups will
meet again in France for the race.
The
overarching goal of the competition is to advance the development of
nanomachines capable of real work, like carrying molecular-scale cargo and
facilitating nano-fabrication.
"This
race pushes the limits of molecular nanocar design and methods to control
them," Tour said. "So through this competitive process, worldwide
expertise is elevated and the entire field of nanomanipulation is encouraged to
progress all the faster."
The race,
originally scheduled for next summer, has been delayed by the pandemic. The
racers will still need to gather in France to be overseen by the judges, but
all of the teams will control their cars via the internet on tracks under
scanning tunneling microscopes in their home labs.
"So
the drivers will be together, and the cars and tracks will be dispersed around
the world," Tour said. "But the distance of each track will be
identical, to within a few nanometers."
The
Rice-Graz entry won the 2017 race with an asterisk, as its car moved so quickly
on the gold surface that it was impossible to capture images for judging. The
team was then allowed to race on a silver surface that offered sufficient
resistance and finished the 150-nanometer course in 90 minutes.
"The
course was supposed to have been only 100 nanometers, but the team was
penalized to add an extra 50 nanometers," Tour said. "Eventually, it
was no barrier anyway." First prize on the gold track went to a Swiss team
that finished a 100-nanometer course in six-and-a-half hours.
Tour's lab
built the world's first single-molecule car in 2005 and it has gone through
many iterations since, with the related development of molecular motors that
drill through cells to deliver drugs.
Rice graduate student Alexis van Venrooy is lead author of the paper. Co-authors are Rice alumnus Victor García-López and undergraduate John Tianci Li. Dubrovskiy is an assistant professor of chemistry at the University of Houston-Clear Lake and an academic visitor at Rice. Tour is the T.T. and W.F. Chao Chair in Chemistry as well as a professor of computer science and of materials science and nanoengineering at Rice.