The boundary between electronics and biology
is blurring with the first detection by researchers at Department of Energy's
Oak Ridge National Laboratory of ferroelectric properties in an amino acid
called glycine
A multi-institutional
research team led by Andrei Kholkin of the University of Aveiro, Portugal, used
a combination of experiments and modeling to identify and explain the presence
of ferroelectricity, a property where materials switch their polarization when
an electric field is applied, in the simplest known amino acid -- glycine.
"The
discovery of ferroelectricity opens new pathways to novel classes of
bioelectronic logic and memory devices, where polarization switching is used to
record and retrieve information in the form of ferroelectric domains,"
said coauthor and senior scientist at ORNL's Center for Nanophase Materials
Sciences (CNMS) Sergei Kalinin.
Although
certain biological molecules like glycine are known to be piezoelectric, a
phenomenon in which materials respond to pressure by producing electricity,
ferroelectricity is relatively rare in the realm of biology. Thus, scientists
are still unclear about the potential applications of ferroelectric
biomaterials.
"This
research helps paves the way toward building memory devices made of molecules
that already exist in our bodies," Kholkin said.
For
example, making use of the ability to switch polarization through tiny electric
fields may help build nanorobots that can swim through human blood. Kalinin
cautions that such nanotechnology is still a long way in the future.
"Clearly
there is a very long road from studying electromechanical coupling on the
molecular level to making a nanomotor that can flow through blood,"
Kalinin said. "But unless you have a way to make this motor and study it,
there will be no second and third steps. Our method can offer an option for
quantitative and reproducible study of this electromechanical conversion."
The
study, published in Advanced Functional Materials, builds on previous research
at ORNL's CNMS, where Kalinin and others are developing new tools such as the
piezoresponse force microscopy used in the experimental study of glycine.
"It
turns out that piezoresponse force microsopy is perfectly suited to observe the
fine details in biological systems at the nanoscale," Kalinin said.
"With this type of microscopy, you gain the capability to study
electromechanical motion on the level of a single molecule or small number of
molecular assemblies. This scale is exactly where interesting things can
happen."
Kholkin's
lab grew the crystalline samples of glycine that were studied by his team and
by the ORNL microscopy group. In addition to the experimental measurements, the
team's theorists verified the ferroelectricity with molecular dynamics
simulations that explained the mechanisms behind the observed behaviour
ScienceDaily
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