“The biggest change that has happened over the last few years is, as you know, the discovery and production of low-cost shale gas,” said plenary speaker Arun Majumdar of Google Inc. at the 2013 Materials Research Society (MRS) Spring Meeting in San Francisco, Calif. While prominent materials researchers at previous MRS Meetings have been warning the materials community for several years of the impending emergency of fulfilling the world’s energy needs, this year has witnessed a marked change in this message.
This year’s MRS Spring Meeting, boasting over 6400 participants, including exhibitors and virtual attendees, from 60 countries to fill the 56 technical symposia, was held on April 1–5, 2013, in San Francisco, Calif. The Meeting Chairs, Mark L. Brongersma (Stanford University), Vladimir Matias (iBeam Materials, Inc.), Rachel Segalman (University of California–Berkeley), Lonnie D. Shea (Northwestern University), and Heiji Watanabe (Osaka University) invited Majumdar, former director of the US Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), to give the plenary address concerning challenges the materials community now faces to achieve a sustainable energy future.
Shale oil and gas have changed the game in the last decade or so, Majumdar said. Such deposits are located across the globe, with most of it in China, where it has not begun to be tapped. The permeability of a shale deposit is coupled to pore pressure, but the research community does not yet know enough about how this coupling works, so researchers cannot predict how long shale gas will last. Furthermore, not all shales are the same. Some have a substantial clay component that makes them impossible to fracture, at least so far. This is an opportunity for materials researchers to figure out a way to fracture such difficult shales, Majumdar said. He sees natural gas from shale as a bridge to supply energy until renewable resources can mature enough to become economically viable. Majumdar’s talk can be viewed online at www.mrs.org/spring2013, along with a number of symposia and other special talks.
Numerous presentations on materials and energy were given across a number of technical sessions, with one symposium specifically combining the topic with sustainability. Ronny Neumann (Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel) wants to utilize polyoxometalates as molecular analogs of transition-metal oxide materials to catalyze novel reactions. Polyoxometalates offer numerous benefits over traditional catalysis methods such as anionic solubility in water, thermal stability over a range of temperatures, simple aqueous chemistry, and synthetic fidelity. The intense control of structures offers thousands of possibilities for specific applications. Neumann highlighted several specific examples of how using these polyoxometalates could change the way we think about chemistry. Using cobalt polyoxometalates, it is possible to split water in a four-electron reduction reaction. If combined with another specific catalytic compound, this chemistry can be used to reduce CO2 to CO, which can be used to create liquid fuels compatible with internal-combustion engines. Neumann went on to explain how polyoxometalates can be used to create molecular oxygen, convert methane to methanol, and even directly convert bio-resources to synfuel.
Another area of research that continues to generate much attention at MRS is graphene. Roman Fasel (EMPA/University of Bern) presented research on the bottom-up synthesis of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs), a material of interest because it exhibits many of graphene’s appealing electronic properties but is semiconducting rather than metallic. Fasel explained that bottom-up synthetic approaches from small-molecule precursors are preferable for obtaining high-quality ribbons, because top-down lithographic techniques yield ribbons with malformed edges, and cannot produce ribbons narrow enough to have a desirable bandgap. He presented several distinct types of GNR synthesized by his group, all having “armchair-type” edges, as compared to “zigzag.”
Sreeprasad T. Sreenivasan (Kansas State University) focused on the nanotomy of graphene sheets to give graphene quantum materials. Because pristine graphene has no bandgap and is therefore conducting, it is inappropriate for applications like transistors, but restricting graphene’s dimensions opens a bandgap, affording a semiconductor. Sreenivasan accomplished this through nanotomy, a top-down approach that involves cutting graphene sheets with a diamond knife. This automated technique allows for precise control over size and shape of the resulting material, and has produced GNRs as narrow as 5 nm in width. The technique also produced tapered graphene structures, which feature gradual bandgap evolution as the ribbon widens. This property, in that it dictates a direction for the flow of current, allows for the creation of what Sreenivasan called a diodic transistor.
Another rapidly moving field is stretchable electronics. John A. Rogers, who was named a MacArthur Fellow in 2009, has much to show from his research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. For his talk upon receiving the MRS Mid-Career Researcher Award, Rogers described what research groups worldwide are doing to create soft, stretchable, and flexible materials that can interface with the soft tissues in our bodies. “What if you want to surround your brain with integrated circuits, or wrap them around your heart, or melt them into your skin?” Rogers asked. Such circuits would be highly valuable for studying and monitoring health conditions and understanding how these regions of the body work, but current Si integrated circuit technology is far from being the answer. The hard, brittle, inflexible circuits that work so well in many areas of technology just do not conform well to soft tissue, in part due to a large modulus mismatch between the materials.
So he and others are trying to design circuits that conform to biological systems—circuits that are soft, flexible, and biocompliant. They are investigating polymers, small molecule organics, carbon-based materials (e.g, nanotubes and graphene), and perhaps surprisingly, silicon. Part of the brittleness of Si is due to its thickness; at a thickness of ∼10 nm, Si becomes relatively “floppy and bendable,” according to Rogers. This material has the advantage of being able to stick to surfaces through van der Waals forces, so no adhesive is needed. But these materials are only flexible enough to wrap around a cone or cylinder, not the intricate contours of the skin or brain.
The need, Rogers said, is to go from flexile to stretchable Si devices. Putting ultrathin Si devices on a prestrained rubber substrate can create “wavy” silicon nanoribbons that stretch like the bellows of an accordion. Taking this concept a step further, the researchers exploited a buckling mechanism by creating an open spider web structure of filamentary serpentine Si structures bonded to a soft, low modulus silicone surface. This system came close to matching the modulus of skin, and adhered to the skin through van der Waals forces, making it mechanically invisible to the person wearing the circuit. The circuit can be made optically invisible, for example, by hiding it in a temporary tattoo with an FDA-approved adhesive.
In a separate talk as part of a symposium, Rogers said that while his group has demonstrated ultrathin conformal electronics both on the surface of and embedded inside skin, there still remains the challenge to deliver power to these devices, to enable applications like sensing. While solar, RF far field (wireless), and inductive power delivery options exist, developing flexible and stretchable batteries is perhaps the ultimate solution, Rogers said. To develop such a battery, his group developed a flexible lithium-ion battery structure with silicone elastomers as substrates comprising arrays of disks containing the cathode and anode active materials, and interconnected these disks by a “self-similar” or spring-within-a-spring interconnect structure. The favorable mechanics imparted by the self-similar structures protect the battery electrode disks during stretching, while silicone spacer disks in between the electrodes provide restoring forces. The resulting flexible and stretchable battery demonstrates biaxial stretching up to 300%, without affecting its energy density.
Work from a group at Stanford University, led by Zhenan Bao, approaches stretchable electronics from a different direction. “Human skin is a great inspiration for us to think about the future of electronics,” Bao said. In fact, what her group and many others are investigating is more of a “super skin” that has more functionality than the real thing. These include the possibilities of adding chemical sensing functions to electronic skin, making it stretchable, and even biodegradable. Applications include health monitoring, robotics, and consumer electronics. Current work in Bao’s group includes developing organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) as touch (pressure) sensors. An integrated organic transistor device consisting of a polymer semiconductor and rubber pyramid contact points generates an electrical current when pressure is applied. The device works at pressures as low as a few kilopascals, which Bao describes as equivalent to a “gentle touch,” making it more sensitive than previous capacitor-based sensors. The gate and source–drain voltages can be optimized to enhance the sensitivity.
When this sensor is attached to a person’s wrist, it can monitor the heartbeat through the pulse point and provide a detailed three-wave peak representing the various stages of blood pumping through a heart, Bao said. Another area of investigation is in flexible temperature sensors that operate around body temperature. Bao said that a flexible wireless body temperature sensor is within reach.
A program closely discussed at recent MRS Meetings is the Materials Genome Initiative (MGI), which President Obama announced nearly two years ago. The goal of this initiative is to double the speed and reduce the cost of discovering, developing, and deploying new advanced materials. Due to the initiative, the materials research community is now beginning to hear about a “shift in paradigm” in the way research as well as education is being done. The initiative receives funding across government agencies, including the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the Department of Energy (DOE), and the Department of Defense (DOD).
“The invention of silicon circuits and lithium ion batteries made computers and iPods and iPads possible, but it took years to get those technologies from the drawing board to the market place,” the President had said at Carnegie Mellon University. “We can do it faster.”
At the MRS Spring Meeting, during a Government Agency Forum, James Warren of NIST gave a history of the initiative. Among the changes the research community is seeing since this initiative is the formation of more interdisciplinary teams. For example, MGI has funded research teams consisting of scientists who specialize in computational, experimental, and computer science. Likewise, in the education area, in order to prepare students for the new workforce, Ashley White, who is an AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow, said scientists need to start thinking of themselves as part of a network rather than as individuals. White spoke at Symposium EEE on education.
2013 Materials Research Society Spring Meeting Symposium Support 1-Material, Inc.
Abengoa
ABTECH Scientific
Air Liquide Laboratories
Air Products
AIXTRON SE
Aldrich Materials Science
American Institute of Physics
Applied Materials, Inc.
Argonne National Laboratory
ASM
Asylum Research, an Oxford Instruments Company
Bangor University
Baruch Future Ventures, LLC
Biolin Scientific
Bruker Optics
Cabot Microelectronics Corporation
Center for Emergent Superconductivity (An EFRC at Brookhaven National Lab, Argonne National Lab, and University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Center for Nanoscale Materials, Argonne DOE User Facility
Centre of Plastic Electronics Imperial College London
CP Kelco
CrysTec GmbH
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Maryland
DFG, German Research Foundation
Dr. Eberl MBE-Komponenten GmbH
DuPont Central Research and Development
E.A. Fischione Instruments, Inc.
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne-EPFL
Efree, a DOE-funded Energy Frontier Center
Electro-Optics Center, The Pennsylvania State University
Energy & Environmental Science
Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH
Fujimi Corporation
General Electric Global Research Center
Genzyme Corporation
Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin
Hysitron, Inc.
IGSSE Technische Universität München
Institute for Materials Research (IMO)/IMOMEC-Hasselt
JEOL USA, Inc.
Journal of Materials Science
Journal of the Royal Society Interface
M. Watanabe & Co., Ltd.
Micron Technology Foundation, Inc.
Nanomechanics, Inc.
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
NISE Network
Novellus Systems, Inc.
NSF-Division of DMR
NSF MRSEC Center for Research on Interface Structures and Phenomena (CRISP), Yale/SCSU
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Office of Naval Research
Oxford Instruments Omicron NanoScience
Park Systems, Inc.
Photovoltaic Power Generation Technology Research Association
Picosun
Purdue University
Radiant Technologies, Inc.
Rocky Mountain Vacuum Tech, Inc.
Royal Society of Chemistry
SBA Materials, Inc.
Seki Diamond Systems
Society For Biomaterials
Soochow University, Biomedical Polymers Laboratory
Soochow University, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Advanced Functional Polymer Design and Application
SPECS Surface Nano Analysis GmbH
Springer
STAIB Instruments, Inc.
SuperPower, Inc.
Tokyo Electron America, Inc.
TUM International Graduate School for Science and Engineering (IGSSE)
United Technologies Research Center
University of California–Los Angeles
WCU Flexible Nanosystem Group/Institute of Nanotechnology-Korea University
WITec Instruments Corp.
In her talk, White presented recommendations that came from an NSF workshop held in December 2012. Among these recommendations are for universities to hire more faculty with computational expertise, and for students to receive cross and interdisciplinary training. For example, students who specialize in experimental work should learn about the uses and limitations of modeling and vice versa. The workshop also recommends exposing students to interdisciplinary team projects by encouraging the development of centers and common-use research facilities.
Graduate Students Receive Gold and Silver Awards Graduate Student Awards were announced during an evening ceremony on April 3 at the 2013 Materials Research Society Spring Meeting in San Francisco.
Throughout the week, the MRS Spring Meeting was bustling with activities, from the technical sessions and forums to award presentations, an equipment exhibit, and opportunities for professional development and public outreach. The “Best of MRS” can be viewed online at www.mrs.org/spring2013 through video capture of selected symposia and special talks by OnDemand® as well as interviews on MRS TV.