| Media
Contact:
Dr. Juan
Hinestroza, 919/515-9426
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Aug.
31, 2005
New ‘Alien
Nanofiber’ Has Potential Anti-Counterfeiting
Applications
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 |
The
new nanofiber looks like an alien, but has
the potential to serve anti-counterfeiting
purposes.
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Under a
powerful microscope it looks like an alien – something
out of Roswell, N.M., or “The X-Files.”
But a brand-new,
tiny fiber dubbed the “alien
nanofiber,” co-invented by a North Carolina State
University textiles professor and a chemical engineering
professor from the University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez,
has the potential to become a big deterrent to counterfeiters.
NC State’s Dr. Juan Hinestroza, assistant professor
of textile engineering, chemistry and science, and
Dr. Carlos Rinaldi, assistant professor of chemical
engineering at the University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez,
created novel nanoscale fibers that can be placed inside
a garment or paper document and serve as a “fingerprint” that
proves the garment or document is genuine. Graduate
student Carola Barrera and high school student Aldo
Briano are also involved in the research.
At about 150 nanometers in diameter, the fibers are
smaller than living cells and invisible to the naked
eye. A nanometer is one-billionth of a meter; for comparison
purposes, the Web site for the National Nanotechnology
Initiative, a federal research and development initiative
that coordinates multiagency efforts in nanoscale science,
says that a human hair is about 80,000 nanometers wide,
while a sheet of paper is about 100,000 nanometers
wide.
The
tiny fibers are designed to have within them even
smaller
nanoparticles with an electrical, magnetic
or optical “signature” that can prove a
product genuine. The product would need only be scanned,
or read, by a device looking for the particular signature.
For
example, Hinestroza says, name-brand clothing with
nanofibers can be scanned at different points in
the supply chain to ensure pirated clothing doesn’t
get into retail outlets or
into your closet. Passports with nanofibers can be
scanned to ensure their legitimacy. Ostensibly, paper
money with nanofibers would help ensure fake twenties
don’t get into your wallet – or the grocer’s
till.
“The fibers can essentially serve as molecular
bar codes,” Hinestroza says. “We can control
the position, frequency and distribution of particles
inside the fibers, and their signature.”
He also
says that manufacturers wouldn’t need
to change the ways they make things in order to include
the nanofibers.
“These fibers can be easily incorporated into
existing textile manufacturing facilities,” Hinestroza
said. “Textile products are the perfect vehicles
for incorporating nanotechnology into commercial applications.”
The process used to create the nanofibers is called
electrospinning, a textiles manufacturing process first
used in the 1930s but now being put to use to create
tiny fibers.
In their
electrospinning research, the scientists apply electrical
charges to water-based polymer solutions
containing tiny nanoparticles, including magnetic particles
or quantum dots, tiny particles that, depending on
their size, display colors. When enough electrical
charge is applied to the solution, an unstable jet – or
narrow stream of solution and nanoparticles – moving
like a whip through air, is formed. The whipping motion
elongates the jet while the solvent evaporates, producing
a tiny fiber containing the nanoparticles.
The researchers then tested the fibers and found the
fibers had magnetic properties.
Hinestroza and Rinaldi have been invited to present
their nanofiber findings at a number of academic conferences
in the next few months.
The research is sponsored by a National Science Foundation
Nanoscale Exploratory Research grant, and by the NC
State Nanotechnology Steering Committee.
- kulikowski -
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