This application relates to nanostructures such as nanowires, nanorods, nanoparticles and other nano-scale structures.
Microstructures with a scale on the order of one micron or less along at least one dimension of the microstructures are nanostructures. Nanostructures can be in various geometries and dimensions and may be referred to as nanowires, nanorods, or nanoparticles. Elongated nanostructures with a width on the order of one micron or less and a length ranging from hundreds of microns to microns or tens of microns can be designed to have different lengthwise segments made of two or more different materials as encoded nanoparticles or nanowires for identifying objects in various applications such as product recognition, anti-counterfeiting, and bio-tagging. The difference in one or more properties of different segments made of different materials can be detected and used to provide unique encoding codes for identification and authentication. Examples of segmented nanoparticles or nanowires can be found in various literature, e.g., International Patent Application WO2005/020890A2 by Penn et al., U.S. patent Applications US2006/0038979A1 and US2005/0032226A1 by Natan et al., U.S. patent Application No. US2005/0019556A1 by Freeman et al., and an article entitled “Encoded beads for electrochemical identification” by Wang et al. in Anal. Chem. Vol. 75, page 4667-4671 (2003). In these and other multi-segment nanoparticle or nanowire tags, the different segments made of different materials are usually manufactured by electroplating different metal materials in pores of a porous membrane via multiple electroplating steps. The readout of such multi-segment nanoparticle or nanowire tags can be achieved by optical reflectivity microscopy or electrochemical stripping voltammetry.
Such encoded nanoparticles or nanowires provide an alternative to conventional tagging techniques such as printed barcodes or RFID tags and may be used to provide various advantages over other tagging techniques such as large coding capacity and low manufacturing cost.
The specification of this application describes, among others, designs, fabrication and applications of nanoparticles or nanowires made of an alloy of two or more different metal elements to provide a unique identification code the composition of the alloy. A single-step electroplating process may be used to form the alloy nanowires without separate electroplating steps.
In one aspect, an article is disclosed to provide an identification tag which comprises alloy nanostructures of an alloy of two or more different metal elements. A combination of (1) a number of the two or more different metal elements and (2) relative concentrations of the two or more different metal elements constitutes a unique identification code for the identification tag. The alloy can be formed from, for example, a single electroplating process using a plating solution comprising a mixture of the two or more different metal elements.
In another aspect, a method for synthesizing a nanostructure identification tag is described to include performing a single deposition step to deposit two or more different metal elements on a template to grow alloy nanostructure of an alloy of the two or more different metal elements; and using the alloy nanostructures removed from the template to form a nanostructure identification tag for identification based on the relative concentrations of the two or more different metal elements in the alloy.
In yet another aspect, a method for synthesizing a nanostructure identification tag is disclosed to include performing a single electroplating step by using a plating solution comprising a mixture of two or more different metal elements to electroplate the two or more different metal elements on a membrane having pores to grow alloy nanowires of an alloy of the two or more different metal elements in the pores; and using the alloy nanowires removed from the membrane to form a nanostructure identification tag for identification based on the relative concentrations of the two or more different metal elements in the alloy.
In yet another aspect, a method for providing a nanostructure identification tag is disclosed to include stimulating an identification tag comprising alloy nanostructures to produce a signal. Each of the alloy nanostructures is made of an alloy of two or more different metal elements with predetermined relative concentrations of the two or more different metal elements in the alloy. The method includes measuring the signal from the alloy nanostructures to extract information on the predetermined relative concentrations of the two or more different metal elements in the alloy; and using a combination of (1) the predetermined relative concentrations of the two or more metal elements, and (2) a number of the two or more metal elements as an identification code to identify an object associated with the identification tag.
These and other examples and implementations are described in detail in the drawings, the detailed description and the claims.
Examples and implementations of nanostructures in this application use a single segment of an alloy of two or more different metal elements to provide a unique identification code based on the composition of the alloy. The code can be, for example, a combination of (1) the number of the two or more different metal elements in the alloy and (2) relative concentrations of the two or more different metal elements in the alloy. The two or more different metal elements are not spatially separated into different segments and are spatially mixed in form of the alloy within the same segment. The encoding for the identification code is based on the composition of the alloy and is not based on any spatial difference caused by different segments. Therefore, nanostructures in this application are compositionally encoded in a single segment of the alloy. The encoding capacity of such alloy nanostructures is sufficiently large for many applications and the total number of different codes is nm−1, where n is the number of the two or more different metal elements in the alloy and m is the number of detectable different relative concentrations in each of the two or more different metal elements in the alloy. Hence, thousands of encoding patterns can be achieved by using five or six different metals in the alloy with four or five different relative concentrations of the metals in the alloy.
Various geometries and dimensions may be used for the compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures described in this application. The shape of such a compositionally encoded alloy nanostructure may be elongated to have a dimension along one direction greater than another direction (e.g. a wire-like structures, tubes, ellipsoids), may have similarly sizes in different directions (e.g., spheres or cubes), or in other shapes such as stars. Depending on the geometry, a compositionally encoded alloy nanostructure may be referred to as a nanoparticle, nanowire or other term to signify the geometry. For an elongated wire or tube structure, the cross section can be in various shapes: circular, elliptical, square, rectangular, polygonal, star, and others. Specific examples described in this application are compositionally encoded nanowires and are provided to illustrate various features of compositionally encoded nanostructures that may be implemented in geometries different from nanowires. One reason that different geometries can be used in compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures is that the encoding and the readout of the code are based on the composition and are independent of the geometry or shape of the nanostructure. Notably, such a compositionally encoded alloy nanostructure is a uniform composition of an alloy of selected two or more metal elements throughout the nanostructure and does not have distinctive segments made of different metal materials.
Metals that can be alloyed with one another may be selected from a range of metal elements to construct compositionally encoded nanostructures based on the examples and implementations described in this application. For example, the two or more metals for a compositionally encoded alloy nanostructure can be selected based on the readout technique.
For voltammetry readout, the metals should be selected to have distinguishable voltammetric signature signals. For an optical readout based on the optical spectral properties of the metal elements, the metals should be selected to have distinguishable optical spectral signals. The X-ray fluorescence (XRF) detection is an example of the optical readout and the metals should be selected to have distinguishable XRF peaks. Metals that can be electroplated or alloyed to form a desired alloy for a compositionally encoded alloy can be used. Examples of suitable metals for compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures in some applications include but are not limited to Bi, Sb, Pb, Sn, Tl, In, Ga, Cd, Zn, Au, Ag, Cu, Ni, Co, Te and Se. In addition to readout considerations, other considerations may also be included in selection of the two or more metals for a compositionally encoded alloy. For example, the magnetic property of the compositionally encoded alloy, such as a Co—Ni—Cu alloy, may be considered to facilitate magnetic separation of the compositionally encoded nanostructures (e.g., nanowires) during the fabrication process. For another example, the alloy composition may be selected to allow for attachment to another structure such as a molecule or a metal.
The readout of such a compositionally encoded tag can include stimulating or exciting an identification tag containing compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures to produce a signal, measuring the signal from the alloy nanostructures to extract information on the predetermined relative concentrations of the alloy; and using a combination of (1) the predetermined relative concentrations of the two or more metal elements, and (2) a number of the two or more metal elements as an identification code to identify an object associated with the identification tag. As a specific example, an X-ray fluorescence (XRF) readout uses X-ray to stimulate the identification tag containing compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures and the XRF signal produced by the compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures under the X-ray excitation is measured to read the code. In a voltammetry readout, the identification tag containing compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures is dissolved in a solution and an electrical voltage is applied through the solution to electrochemically stimulate and read the encoded alloy nanostructures. The readout of compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures can be implemented based on various material characterization technologies including but not limited to optical readout technologies and electrochemical readout technologies. Some readout examples are Energy Dispersive X-Ray Microanalysis/Spectroscopy, Electron Backscatter Diffraction detection, Micro X-Ray Fluorescence Detection, Raman Fluorescence Spectroscopy, Raman Flame Spectroscopy, Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry Detection, Linear Sweep Voltammetry detection, Pulse Voltammetry detection, Square Wave Voltammetry detection, and solid-state chronopotentiometric measurement. A readout technology for a compositionally encoded tag can be a destructive readout where the tag is destroyed and can be read once. A voltammetry readout is a destructive readout in which the tag is dissolved in a solution in order to conduct voltammetric measurements. A readout technology for a compositionally encoded tag can also be a non-destructive readout where the compositionally encoded tag is preserved after each readout and can be read multiple times. The XRF readout and the solid-state chronopotentiometric readout are two examples for a non-destructive readout.
Compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures based on the examples and implementations described in this application can be fabricated by various techniques. Electroplating and various multi-component deposition processes such as a multi-component vapor deposition like sputtering may be used to fabricate the alloy nanostructures. A template can be designed to include multiple nano-scale structures shaped to grow desired alloy nanostructures and the selected materials for the alloy are deposited into the nano-scale structures of the template to form the alloy nanostructures. The nano-scale structure is shaped based on the geometry of the desired nanostructure. For nanowires, the template can be a membrane with nano pores whose internal geometry defines the shape of the nanowires. Selected materials for the alloy are deposited into the nano pores to form the nanowires.
Notably, a single-step alloying process based on electroplating or another multi-component deposition process can be used to fabricate compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures to simplify the fabrication process, improve fabrication accuracy and reduce the fabrication cost. Such a single-step process can be advantageous over multi-step processes. For example, segmented, bar-coded nanoparticle or nanowire tags with multiple segments are often fabricated by a multi-step electroplating process in which multiple time-consuming electroplating steps are performed sequentially to form the different segments with different plating solutions for plating different metals. Such a multi-step electroplating process requires careful chemical and layer process control for dimensional accuracy and repeatability. The replacement of metal plating solutions between different electroplating steps in these multi-step processes can further complicate the control, accuracy and repeatability of the processes. Fabrication of segmentless, compositionally encoded alloy nanostructures described in this application can use a single electroplating process to avoid the multiple electroplating steps and thus avoid various limitations and problems associated with multi-step electroplating processes. The examples provided below illustrate a single-step template-guided electrodeposition process to prepare nanowire tags from a solution containing different concentrations of metal ions. The specific ratio of these metal alloys deposited from solution provides a unique signature for the resulting nanowire tags. The ratio of metal alloys and the resulting nanowire tag composition may be varied to produce numerous encoded signatures which may be detected and distinguished using various readout methods.
The tag 101 in
Apparatus and chemical regents used in the example in
Alumina membranes with 200-nm pore diameters and annular support rings were used as templates in experiments. Prior to the electroplating, a 0.5-1.0 μm-thick silver layer was thermally evaporated and deposited on one surface of the membrane to provide electrical contact for further electrodeposition. The membrane was placed on a glass slide, with the silver side up. Electrical contact to the membrane was made using an aluminum foil. The aluminum foil acted as a contact to the working electrode, with a platinum wire and Ag/AgCl serving as the counter and reference electrodes, respectively. Silver was then deposited at −5 mA for 20 min [using a 0.2 M acetate buffer solution containing 100 mg L−1 silver(I)] to further seal the membrane and prevent leakage of the plating solution. The membrane was placed on an aluminum foil, which folds the glass slide, so that the silver film on the membrane contacted the foil. A 2-mL acetate buffer solution (0.20 M) containing indium, lead, and bismuth (100 mg L−1 each) was added, and a current of −0.5 mA was applied for 40 min. An electrodeposition efficiency of ˜55% was estimated based on the concentration of the metal ions before and after the plating.
Upon completing the plating, the membrane was rinsed with distilled water and the sliver film backing was dissolved in a 30% HNO3 solution until the silver color disappeared. The alumina membrane was then rinsed with distilled water and placed in a 3 M NaOH solution for 1 h to dissolve the alumina. The resulting suspension was centrifuged at 8000 rpm to sediment the particles. This process was repeated three times to remove residual salt. The nanowires were dissolved by adding 5 μL of their suspension into 10 μL of a 6 M HNO3 solution for 40 minutes.
SWV measurements of the dissolved alloy nanowires were performed using a mercury-coated glassy carbon electrode. The glassy carbon surface was first polished with an 0.05-pm alumina slurry and sonicated in 1 M nitric acid, acetone, and deionized water for 5-min periods in each case before the plating. The mercury-coated glassy carbon electrode was prepared in situ following 1-min conditioning at 0.6 V, using a 1-min deposition at −1.1 V, in an acetate buffer (0.20 M, pH 5.2) solution containing 10 mg L−1 mercury and 15 μL of the HNO3 solution of the dissolved nanowires. Square-wave voltammetric measurements were performed by scanning the potential between −0.9 and 0.0 V, with a step potential of 50 mV, an amplitude of 20 mV, and a frequency of 25 Hz. Baseline correction of the resulting voltammograms was performed using the “moving average mode” of the GPES (Autolab) software.
The example in
The observed voltammetric patterns can be predicted from the composition of the plating solution.
As expected, the composition of the alloy nanowire and hence the resulting bar code patterns are controlled by the composition of the plating solution. The number of uniquely identifiable nanowires depends on the number of distinguishable (nonoverlapping) metal markers and upon the number of distinguishable current intensities. The number of distinguishable metal markers is controlled by the extent of their peak overlap in the voltammetric scan. The voltammetric stripping reading method commonly allows simultaneous measurements of up to five or six metal markers in a single run (with minimal peak overlap). The number of distinguishable current signals will be determined by the precision of the metal plating process and the precision of the voltammetric measurement (see data below). It is possible to achieve thousands of usable voltammetric signatures with four or five metal markers present at five or six different loadings. Identification algorithms could be used to improve the ability to distinguish between nanowires with very similar composition patterns. The ability to tune the current intensities by controlling the composition of the alloy nanowires, through the composition of the plating solution, is independent of the length of these nanowires. The length of the nanowires is determined by the deposition time and hence the plating charge.
The voltammetric signatures obtained by the one-step alloy preparation route can be compared to voltammetric signatures from the multistep synthesis of multisegment nanowires.
High identification accuracy requires a uniform and reproducible electrodeposition process. The precision and uniformity of the template-directed synthesis of the alloy nanowires were examined by plotting histograms for each current intensity in connection with six different suspensions of the nanowires. The result is shown in
The above measurements demonstrate that compositionally encoded nanowire tags, with a large number of recognizable voltammetric signatures, can be prepared by a single-step electrodeposition from a metal mixture plating solution. Such templated synthesis of alloy nanowire tags with distinct composition patterns is substantially simpler and faster than the preparation of multisegment nanowires (involving sequential plating steps). The resulting voltammetric signatures correlate well with the composition of the metal mixture plating solution, indicating reproducible plating processes. Such bar code patterns are inherent to the alloy composition and do not require combination of different metal segments of nanocrystals. The new protocol thus represents a useful addition to the arsenal of nanomaterial-based identification tags. Further improvements in the speed, identification accuracy, and simplicity of reading the new encoded nanowires could be achieved by eliminating the dissolution step in connection with a nondestructive solid-state chronopotentio-metric measurement or by a direct XOray fluorescence (EDAX element analysis). The latter represents an advantage over optical reading of striped nanowires that commonly requires a CCD-modified optical microscope, along with a proprietary software. The solid-state electrochemical route could be particularly attractive for decentralized applications, in connection with compact (hand-held), battery-powered analyzers.
As a specific example for non-destructive readout of the compositionally encoded alloy nanowires, the following sections describe ternary Co—Ni—Cu alloy nanowires with distinct X-ray fluorescence (XRF) barcode patterns using a one-step template-guided electrodeposition. Such coupling of one-step templated synthesis with a non-destructive XRF readout of the composition patterns greatly simplifies practical applications of barcoded nanomaterials. The example here further illustrates that the compositionally encoded alloy nanowires can provide broad composition ranges and hence lead to a large number of distinguishable XRF signatures. The resulting fluorescence barcodes correlate well with the composition of the metal mixture plating solution, indicating reproducible plating processes. Factors affecting the coding capacity and identification accuracy are examined and potential tracking and authenticity applications involving embedding the nanowires within plastics or inks are demonstrated and discussed.
XRF has been widely used in various fields for rapid and accurate non-destructive metal measurements without sample preparation. The XRF technique can provide both qualitative and quantitative analyses and offers the simultaneous multi-element non-destructive readout of samples over a wide concentration range. XRF has thus been used for detecting the chemical composition of different alloys, ranging from steel to coins and jewelry. Portable (hand-held) XRF analyzers have been particularly useful for on-site non-destructive forensic or archeological analyses10 in which destructive sampling is not permitted. However, there are no early reports on XRF analyses of barcoded nanowires, in general, and of alloy nanowires, in particular.
Compositionally encoded alloy nanowires can be designed and fabricated with a broad variety of compositions, and hence can be used to provide a large number of unique XRF signatures. The example provided here used a one-step template-guided electrodeposition and a mixture of Ni, Co and Cu ions in an aqueous sulphate plating bath to fabricate the Ni—Co—Cu alloy nanowires. These metals lead to well-resolved and close K-L2,3 XRF peaks and hence to a large coding capacity. The resulting XRF barcode patterns reflect the alloy composition and correlate well with the concentration of the different metal ions in the plating solution. Such coupling of one-step templated synthesis of alloy nanowires with a non-destructive XRF readout (without dissolution of the encoded tags) greatly simplifies practical applications of barcoded nanomaterials, making the new strategy extremely attractive for different on-site tagging applications.
The details on various aspects for fabricating the Ni—Co—Cu alloy nanowires are provided below. Sputtering of gold over one side of the alumina membrane was performed with a Denton Vacuum Desk III TSC (Moorestown, N.J.). Electroplating was accomplished using a CHI 440 electrochemical analyzer controlled by CHI 2.06 software (CH Instruments, Austin, Tex.). The sputtered gold was removed from the membrane using a standard 8-inch SEM sample polishing machine (Model 900 Grinder/Polisher, South Bay Technology Inc., VA), along with 3.0 μm alumina powder (Fisher, Pittsburgh, Pa.). Kevex spectrometer model 0810A, (Kevex, Foster City, Calif.) was used for detecting the composition of the encoded alloy nanowires. Hand-held XRF measurements were performed with a NITON XLt 791 Thin Sample Analyzer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, NITON Analyzers, Billerica, Mass.). Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images were obtained with an XL30 SEM instrument (FEI Co., Hillsboro, Oreg.) using an acceleration potential of 19 kV. The gold target used for sputtering the membrane (99.9+% pure) was purchased from Denton Vacuum (Moorestown, N.J.). The commercial gold and silver plating solutions (Orotemp 24 RTU RACK and 1025 RTU@4.5 Troy/Gallon, respectively) were obtained from Technic Inc. (Anaheim, Calif.). All standard solutions were prepared with ultra-pure (18.2 megaohm) water (ELGA-Ultra-Pure water polishing system model PURELAB ULTRA Scientific). Sodium hydroxide, cupric sulfate pentahydrate (CuSO4.5H2O) and nickel sulfate hexahydrate (NiSO4.6H2O) were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, Mo.). Cobalt sulfate heptahydrate (CoSO4.7H2O) was purchased from Alfa Aesar (Ward Hill, Mass.). Anodisc 25 alumina membranes (25 mm diameter, 200 nm pore size and 60 μm thickness) were received from Whatman (Maidstone, UK). Cyclic olefin copolymer (COC) sheets, 1.1 mm thickness, were obtained from Knightsbridge Plastic Inc., (Fremont, Calif.), while the standard black inkjet ink was received from Hewlett Packard (Palo Alto, Calif.).
Alumina membranes were used as templates for the nanowire growth. Before use, a gold layer was sputtered on one side of the membrane (where the pores are branched) to serve as the working electrode during the electrodeposition (in connection to an aluminum foil contact). Ag/AgCl (3 M KCl) and platinum wires were used as reference and counter electrodes, respectively. The sputtered membrane was placed in the bottom of a plating cell with the sputtered side contacting the aluminum foil. Silver was deposited using the amperometric mode at −0.9 V and a charge of 2 C. Following this, gold was deposited at −0.9 V using a charge of 1 C. The metal-mixture plating solution was subsequently introduced to the cell. Plating solutions composed of 40 g L−1 of H3BO3 and differing concentrations of the metal salts [cobalt (CoSO4.7H2O), nickel (NiSO4.6H2O), and copper (CuSO4.5H2O)] were employed (final pH ˜3.8). The deposition from these plating solutions was carried out at a fixed potential of −1.4 V using a total charge of 15 C.
After completing the deposition, the membrane was removed from the cell and was polished to remove the sputtered gold as previously stated. The alumina membrane was then rinsed with ultrapure water and was divided into two equal pieces. One piece was placed in a 3 M NaOH solution for about 30 min to allow complete dissolution of the membrane. The nanowires were separated magnetically from the NaOH solution and were rinsed with ultrapure water until a neutral pH was obtained. The final 2.0 mL suspension contained ˜3 mg of wires (one half of the membrane). The second piece of the nanowire-containing membrane was kept intact for direct XRF analysis of the embedded nanowires. Inks containing the encoded nanowires were prepared by mixing 3.0 mg of the wires within 1.5 mL of a commercial black inkjet ink. A 30.0 μL droplet of the resulting ink was then dispensed dropwise with a pipette onto standard white printing paper (Xerox, Business 4200, 20 lb, Rochester, N.Y.) and was allowed to dry prior to the XRF readout. Bar-coded nanowires were also embedded in COC plastics by sandwiching varying amounts of the encoded nanomaterials between fused COC sheets.
XRF readouts of the nanowire composition profiles were performed on nanowires embedded in the membrane and nanowires suspended in water after dissolution of the membrane. Some spectra measurements were performed using a NITON handheld XRF analyzer, while most XRF spectra were obtained using the Kevex XRF system, with the high voltage power supply operated at 20 kV and 1.5 mA. X-rays that bombarded the nanowire samples in the Kevex system fluoresced from a Germanium secondary target with K-L2 and K-M3 lines at 9.90 and 11.03 keV, respectively. The XRF spectrum for each sample was acquired over 200 seconds with the Kevex XRF system and for 60 seconds with the NITON handheld unit. Acquired data, in counts per second for the NITON system and in total number of counts for the Kevex system, were recorded with reference to discrete energy levels (25 eV and 20 eV for NITON and Kevex, respectively) over the energy range of interest (0 eV to ˜20 keV). The XRF data were normalized using Microsoft Excel, this was done with respect to counts corresponding to a given K-L2 value of one of the unchanged metals. The intensity extraction for characterizing and normalizing the remaining peaks was performed by measuring the peak height at the corresponding approximate K-L2,3 energies for Co, Ni, or Cu.
The one-step templated synthesis of Ni—Co—Cu alloy nanowires of different metal contents leads to a large number of characteristic XRF barcoding patterns, reflecting the composition of the corresponding nanowires. Such ability to tune the XRF peak intensities by controlling the composition of the alloy nanowires, through the composition of the plating solution.
The alloy nanowires yield a distinct multi-peak spectra, reflecting mostly the emission of K-L2,3 photons and the relatively minor contributions of K-M3 photons from Co and Ni. The approximate peak energies for the K-L2,3 lines are 6.9 keV for Co, 7.5 keV for Ni, and 8.0 keV for Cu, and the K-M3 lines are 7.7 keV for Co, 8.3 keV for Ni, and 8.9 keV for Cu. The influence of the Co and Ni K-M3 lines can be seen as tiny growing shoulders on the Ni and Cu peaks with increasing Co and Ni concentrations, respectively (e.g., the influence of the Ni K-M3 line on the Cu peak is visible in B). Such K-M3 line adds to the information content and distinct signature of the corresponding nanowires by adding more data for the identification of all three constituent metals.
The resulting fluorescence signatures correlate well with the composition of the plating solution, with the corresponding peak intensities following the levels of the corresponding metal in the plating solution. A slight deviation from linearity of the corresponding intensity-concentration plots was observed at the lower concentration values (not shown). Linear intensity—concentration correlations were reported earlier for voltammetric signatures of alloy nanowires following their acid dissolution. The slight nonlinearity, observed at the lowest metal concentrations, is attributed to a potential composition gradient along the nanowires, associated with differences in the ion diffusion rates. Since the number of identifiable nanowires depends upon the number of distinguishable metals and the number of peak intensities, it is possible to obtain thousands of readable XRF signatures with three or four metals present at four to six loadings. In our study using three metals we found that when evaluating a sample of wires grown from a solution containing 5 g L−1 Co, 5 g L−1 Ni, and 5 g L−1 Cu, the detection limit (calculated following the IUPAC method 14) of the wires, dried on paper, was 30 μg/cm2. The uniformity of the plating process was indicated from the low relative standard deviations of 3.4, 4.8 and 6.5% obtained for the intensity of the copper, nickel and cobalt peaks, respectively, in 6 different sections of one membrane template. Also, the reproducibility of the wires was measured by comparing several samples of wires grown from the same solution. The XRF peak heights of these data (normalized as described earlier) yielded relative standard deviations ranging between 4.3 to 8.5% for the three metals. In addition, uniform length-independent alloy compositions should greatly facilitate practical applications of the new bar-coded nanowires.
Portable XRF analyzers have found extensive field applications and could greatly facilitate numerous practical on-site applications of the encoded alloy nanowires. Accordingly, we compared the XRF signatures obtained with an easy-to-use and compact hand-held XRF unit with those recorded with a centralized large laboratory analyzer.
To demonstrate potential tracking and authenticity (counterfeit) applications, the barcoded nanowires were embedded within host materials relevant to product packaging.
The above example and XRF measurements show that XRF readout can be used an effective nondestructive readout of compositionally-encoded alloy nanowires. The template-directed alloy codeposition preparation route obviates the need for sequential deposition steps (from different metal solutions) common for the synthesis of multi-segment nanowire barcodes. Such coupling of one-step synthesis with a non-destructive readout (without prior dissolution) can be used to greatly simplify practical applications of nanomaterial tags. The ability to prepare alloy nanowires with a large variety of compositions and visualize these compositions by XRF makes these alloy nanowires promising candidates for a wide variety of tagging applications ranging from product tracking and protection, counterfeit testing and bioaffinity assays.
Compositionally encoded nanostructures in form of nanowires, nanoparticles or other suitable geometries based on the disclosure of this specification can be attached to other structures for various applications.
The above described compositionally encoded nanostructures may also be made from composite materials of a metal and a polymer. For example, electropolymerized polymers such as polypyrrole or polyanaline can be used to form compositionally encoded nanostructure tags.
The use of the composition of a nanostructure as an identification code can be used to provide an ID tag that has identically-made alloy nanostructures of an alloy of two or more selected metal elements as described the examples above. Alternatively, an ID tag may include a combination of different nanostructures with different compositions. This alternative tag design can provide an average barcode using tags made up of a single metal only, or by combining different ratios of tags that include at least two material types. Using Silver (Ag) and gold (Au) as an example, an average composition of 50% silver/50% gold could be made from three types of tags: (1) barcode tags with a 50/50 Ag—Au alloy composition, (2) a 50/50 mixture of silver single-metal tags and gold single-metal tags, and (3) a mixture of Au—Ag alloy tags with different compositions. In a more specific example, two different types of tags, tags made of an alloy of 10% Au/90% Ag and tags made of an alloy of 90% Au/10% Ag, may be mixed with an equal amount of each of the two types to generate a 50% average mixture composition as the identification code. Such mixing may be used to increase the encoding capability of such compositionally encoded tags. In one implementation, a small number of tags of different compositions can be generated and then mixed together to achieve a range of different compositions for identification codes that expand the number of codes that are based the compositions.
While this specification contains many specifics, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of an invention or of what may be claimed, but rather as descriptions of features specific to particular embodiments of the invention. Certain features that are described in this specification in the context of separate embodiments can also be implemented in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single embodiment can also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable subcombination. Moreover, although features may be described above as acting in certain combinations and even initially claimed as such, one or more features from a claimed combination can in some cases be excised from the combination, and the claimed combination may be directed to a subcombination or a variation of a subcombination.
Unless specifically noted, it is intended that the words and phrases in the specification and the claims be given the ordinary and accustomed meaning to those of ordinary skill in the applicable arts. If any other special meaning is intended for any word or phrase, the specification will clearly state and define the special meaning. In particular, most words have a generic meaning. If it is intended to limit or otherwise narrow the generic meaning, specific descriptive adjectives will be used to do so. Absent the use of special adjectives, it is intended that the terms in this specification and claims be given their broadest possible, generic meaning. Likewise, the use of the words “function” or “means” in the “detailed description” section is not intended to indicate a desire to invoke the special provisions of 35 U.S.C. 112, Paragraph 6, to define the invention. To the contrary, if it is intended to invoke the provisions of 35 U.S.C. 112, Paragraph 6, to define the inventions, the claims will specifically recite the phrases “means for” or “step for” and a function, without also reciting in such phrases any structure, material or act in support of the function. Even when the claims recite a “means for” or “step for” performing a function, if they also recite any structure, material or acts in support of that means or step, then the intention is not to provoke the provisions of 35 U.S.C. 112, Paragraph 6. Moreover, even if the provisions of 35 U.S.C. 112, Paragraph 6 are invoked to define the inventions, it is intended that the inventions not be limited only to the specific structure, material or acts that are described in the preferred embodiments, but in addition, include any and all structures, materials or acts that perform the claimed function, along with any and all known or later-developed equivalent structures, materials or acts for performing the claimed function.
Only a few implementations are disclosed. However, it is understood that variations and enhancements may be made.
This application claims the priority of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/836,268 entitled “Bar-Coded Alloy Nanowires” and filed on Aug. 8, 2006, which is incorporated by reference as part of the specification of this application.
The invention described herein was made with government funding from the National Science Foundation under Grant No. CHE 0506529, from the National Institutes of Health under Grant No. R01 EP002189, and from the Star Program at the Environmental Protection Agency under Grant No. 83090002. The United States Government may have certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60836268 | Aug 2006 | US |