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Rice engineers’ storage technology keeps nanosurfaces clean


A scanning electron microscope image (scale bar is 500 billionths of a meter in length) reveals myriad imperfections like those that Rice University engineers created on the interior walls of materials storage containers. The imperfections keep the surfaces of stored materials clean by attracting volatile organic compounds from air that gets sealed inside the containers. @ Preston Innovation Laboratory/Rice University

Rice University engineers have created containers that can keep volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from accumulating on the surfaces of stored nanomaterials.


The portable and inexpensive storage technology addresses a ubiquitous problem in nanomanufacturing and materials science laboratories and is described in a paper published this week in the American Chemical Society journal Nano Letters.


“VOCs are in the air that surrounds us every day,” said study corresponding author Daniel Preston, an assistant professor in Rice’s Department of Mechanical Engineering. “They cling to surfaces and form a coating, primarily of carbon. You can’t see these layers with the naked eye, but they form, often within minutes, on virtually any surface exposed to air.”

Mechanical engineers in Rice University’s Preston Innovation Laboratory have created containers that can keep volatile organic compounds from accumulating on the surfaces of stored nanomaterials. @ Gustavo Raskosky/Rice University

To address the problem, Ph.D. student and study lead author Zhen Liu, together with Preston and others from his lab, developed a new type of storage container that keeps objects clean. Experiments showed that her approach effectively prevented surface contamination for at least six weeks and could even clean VOC-deposited layers from previously contaminated surfaces.


The technology relies on an ultraclean wall inside the container. The surface of the interior wall is enhanced with tiny bumps and divots ranging in size from a few millionths to a few billionths of a meter. The microscopic and nanoscopic imperfections increase the wall’s surface area, making more of its metal atoms available to VOCs in air that’s inside the containers when they are sealed.


“The texturing allows the internal container wall to act as a ‘sacrificial’ material,” Liu said. “VOCs are pulled onto the surface of the container wall, which allows other objects stored inside to remain clean.”


She said the idea of using a large precleaned surface to accumulate pollutants was proposed 50 years ago but went largely unnoticed. She and her colleagues improved on the idea with modern methods of cleaning and nanotexturing surfaces. They showed, through a series of experiments, that their approach did a better job of preventing VOCs from coating the surfaces of stored materials than other approaches, including sealed petri dishes and state-of-the-art vacuum desiccators.


Preston’s group built on its experiments, developing a theoretical model that accurately characterized what was happening inside the containers. Preston said the model will allow them to refine their designs and optimize system performance in the future. Reference Mitigating Contamination with Nanostructure-Enabled Ultraclean Storage

Zhen Liu, Te Faye Yap, Anoop Rajappan, Rachel A. Shveda, Rawand M. Rasheed, and Daniel J. Preston


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