Nanofibers – the cotton candy of cool science
You know the big difference between me and nanotech researchers? I have never once been at a carnival with a big ball of spun sugar and thought “Wow, I could make nanofibers with that cotton candy machine!”
But that’s just what happened with the bioengineers at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, as reported in the May 24 online edition of Nano Letters.
The most common way of making nanofibers is to use a high voltage electric charge in droplets of the basic material (typically a polymer plastic). At a high enough charge the droplet erupts into a thin (nanoscale) stream and whipped by electrostatic repulsion into a fiber. The process, called electrospinning, works – but is difficult to control and tends to produce uneven results.
The Harvard solution uses a rotary jet spinner, very similar in technique to that used for creating cotton candy. It’s a mechanical process and doesn’t require the use of high voltage equipment. Better still, it’s much more easily controlled.
Like the production of cotton candy, the use of a jet nozzle (density and diameter control) and a spinning collector (uniformity, shape and diameter control) can work with a range of natural and synthetic polymers to produce a high degree of flexibility in the diameter of the fibers and their alignment.
The texture of the fibers can also be varied from smooth to beaded. There is even some ability to produce artificial structures, something like a three-dimensional weave that can be used as the basis of body tissue. This ‘shaping’ aspect of the technique has drawn the attention of medical researchers, who are using the nanofibers as tissue scaffolding (superstructure) in experiments with growing heart muscle from rats.
As co-author of the paper published in the May 24 edition of Nano Letters, Kit Parker (Thomas D. Cabot Associate Professor of Applied Science) put it:
“I was visiting the Society of Laproscopic Surgeons a couple of years ago to look at the equipment demos and it dawned on me that we needed to develop techniques to miniaturize scaffold production so we could do it in vivo. Our finding is the first step,” explains Parker. “The initial testing suggests that our technique is incredibly versatile for both research and everyday applications. As rotary jet spinning does not require high voltage, it really brings nanofiber fabrication to everyone.”
[Source: Nanotechnology Today]
Well, perhaps not everyone can do it, but the technique has obvious advantages. Nanofibers, like other nano-shapes such as nanotubes and nanoparticles are proving to have a wide variety of applications. What will make these applications commonplace will be the production techniques that provide the right kind of control and the ability to ‘scale’ – produce at higher volume.
Mohammad Reza Badrossamay is the lead author, along with Kit Parker, Disease Biophysics Group at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Holly Alice McIlwee; bioengineering graduate student at SEAS, and Josue A. Goss, the DBG laboratory manager who built the machine with Badrossamay.