By harnessing a quantum mechanic force of repulsion researchers have caused nanoparticles to repel each other, and in their next experiment they plan to levitate a tiny gold nanosphere. The quantum force is part of the Casimir effect, first predicted in 1948 by the Dutch physicist Hendrik Casimir, which describes both the attraction and repulsion that occur between two tiny objects held close together in a vacuum. While the attractive force has previously been demonstrated, the new experiment marks the first time the repulsive force has been seen in a lab. But the experiment wasn't just a neat physics trick; the researchers say the repulsive force may one day be used in nanoscale devices. Lead author Jeremy Munday says the research may
lend itself to producing ultrasensitive detectors and almost friction-free devices by separating their components via Casimir repulsion. "Where you would normally have friction," he says, "you can start to greatly reduce that by having a repulsive interaction that doesn't let the surfaces come into contact" [Scientific American].
The Casimir force's attractive properties go on display when two parallel metal plates are placed near each other in a vacuum, and begin to attract each other. This
happens because even a vacuum is actually fizzing with a quantum field of particles, constantly popping in and out of existence. They can even fleetingly interact with and push on the plates. However, the small space between the two plates restricts the kind of particles that can appear, so the pressure from behind the plates overwhelms that from between them. The result is an attractive force that gums up nanoscale machines [New Scientist].
But in the 1960s a Russian physicist theorized that the Casimir force could also produce the opposite effect, forcing objects away from each other. In the new experiment, reported in Nature [subscription required], researchers achieved this effect with a silicon plate and a tiny gold-plated bead placed in a liquid, bromobenzene.
The Casimir attraction between the liquid and the silica plate is stronger than that between the gold bead and the silica, so the fluid forces its way around the bead, pushing it away from the plate [New Scientist].
While commercially available devices aren't yet small enough to run into problems due to the Casimir effect, study coauthor Federico Capasso says it's just a matter of time before engineers are routinely working in the nanoscale. The research team's
next step is to use the phenomenon to levitate a tiny piece of gold, or other material, in the liquid. "The levitation experiment should be straightforward," says Capasso, and, if so, could be exploited in tiny machines within 10 years. "I have a hunch that something useful will come out of this," he adds [Nature News].
Related Content: 80beats: Paper-Thin Nanotube Speakers Can Turn Up the Volume 80beats: Researchers Want to Build a New World Out of Nanotech “Buckypaper” Discoblog: Protect Your Phone With Shock-Absorbing NanotubesImage: Jay Penni / Federico Capasso