Able to align nanotubes at distances of up to several feet from the coil, the team's redesigned Tesla coil is able to create a very strong force field over distances much larger than previously seen, as well as power LEDs embedded in the circuits formed.The team believes that this ability for carbon nanotubes to self-organize into long parallel arrays could see Teslaphoresis being effectively used in the future to direct self-assembly from the microscale to produce macroscale objects.
Nikola Tesla, who invented his self-named coil around 1891 to produce high-voltage, low-current, high frequency alternating-current electric fields, had often toyed with ways to deliver wireless electrical energy, but would have had no idea that a derivative of his invention may one day be used to help self-assemble matter. Even Paul Cherukuri, who tinkered with Tesla coils as a child, did not see the possibilities until his team started experimenting with Tesla fields and nanoparticles..
"I would have never thought, as a 14-year-old kid building coils, that it was going to be useful someday," he says.
Given their electrical and mechanical properties, the team saw nanotubes as an obvious material to test first, particularly given the preemptive work at Rice University, where their bespoke single-walled carbon nanotube production process was invented (and usefully employed in a range of products, including ink-jet printed RFID tags). However the researchers believe that many other nanomaterials could be assembled using their Teslaphoresis process as well.
To help study and improve the effects on other such matter, and at greater distances, larger systems are currently being developed, where patterned surfaces and multiple Tesla coil systems are mooted that may help produce more complex self-assembling circuits from other nanoscale-sized particles.
"There are so many applications where one could utilize strong force fields to control the behavior of matter in both biological and artificial systems," says Cherukuri. "And even more exciting is how much fundamental physics and chemistry we are discovering as we move along. This really is just the first act in an amazing story."
The results of this research were recently published in the journal ACS Nano.