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Page content: Nature cover story: Groningen chemists construct an electrically powered nanovehicle
The cover of scientific journal Nature this week reads Nanomotoring, test-driving a molecular four-wheeler, drawing attention to an article by Groningen chemist Ben Feringa and his research group. The article describes a molecule that does indeed resemble a four-wheel drive vehicle, but that also brings a wondrous insect to mind using four paddle-legs to move about. Electrical energy from the tip of a Scanning Tunnel Microscope (STM) serves to power the vehicle. The article is exactly what Feringa promised to deliver when he received the Spinoza Prize from NWO in 2004. In 1999 he invented a light-powered molecular motor, a spectacular discovery that drew attention throughout the world. One of his goals with the Spinoza funds and a later ERC grant was to use this motor to propel a molecular vehicle. This vehicle would have to be able to perform a controlled movement across a surface. Motor as wheel
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Side view of a molecular model showing how the molecule moves across a surface
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In 2004, Prof. B.L. Feringa, professor of synthetic organic chemistry, received an NWO Spinoza Prize, the highest academic award in the Netherlands. In 2008 he was appointed Academy Professor by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) and received an Advanced Grant from the European Research Council (ERC) for the project ‘Molecular Motors – Controlling movement at the nanoscale’. He has been vice president of KNAW since June 2011.
For more information: Prof. B.L. Feringa
Appendix: video clip of the movement as demonstrated by a molecular model or see YouTube
Reference: Electrically-driven directional motion of a four-wheeled molecule on a metal surface, Tibor Kudernac, Nopporn Ruangsupapichat, Manfred Parschau, Beatriz Maciá, Nathalie Katsonis, Syuzanna R. Harutyunyan, Karl-Heinz Ernst & Ben L. Feringa. Nature, 10 Nov 2011.
DOI: 10.1038/nature10587
| Last modified: | January 25, 2012 12:53 |