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Research in the Martin
group is conducted at the interface between analytical chemistry and
materials science. This entails developing new approaches to do chemical
analyses and separations and developing the new materials that will
make these separations and analyses possible. We are particularly
interested in the application of nanomaterials to bioanalytical
chemistry. In general, the nanomaterials research area entails
preparation of nanoscopic particles of a desired material, characterization
of the fundamental properties of the nanomaterials obtained, and development
of practical applications of nanomaterial-based systems. Our group
has pioneered a powerful new method to prepare nanomaterials called
the " template method." This method entails using the nanoscopic
pores in a host membrane (Figure 1) as templates to prepare
monodisperse nanoscopic particles of a desired material.
Nanotube
membranes (Figure 2) prepared via the template method are of
particular interest. These are synthetic membranes that contain a
parallel collection of nanotubes with inside diameters that can be
of molecular dimension (< 1 nm).
We are exploring applications of these nanotube
membranes in chemical analysis and in membrane-based chemical separations.
For example, we have shown that these membranes can be used as filters
to cleanly separate small molecules on the basis of molecular size
-"molecule sorters." We
are also using these nanotube membranes
for protein separations. Furthermore,
we have shown that these nanotube membranes can form the basis of
a new method of electrochemical analysis that has detection limits
as low as 10-11 M. This
work was featured in a recent cover story in Chemical and Engineering
News (Figure 3).
In both the applications to chemical analysis and chemical separations,
it is important to introduce chemical selectivity into the nanotube
membrane. Ideally, the membrane should show molecular-recognition
capabilities; that is, it should be able to identify and extract a
particular target molecule and ignore all other molecules present
in a contacting solution phase. One approach to developing such ideal
molecular-recognition membranes is to immobilize biochemical molecular-recognition
agents within the nanotubules. Biochemical molecular-recognition agents
being explored include enzymes, antibodies and other proteins and
DNA. This bio/nano research
effort is of particular importance in our group, and Professor Martin
is the Director of the University of Florida’s Center for Research
at the Bio/Nano Interface.
We are also interested in electrochemical energy production, and nanomaterials
play a major role in our research efforts here also. We are investigating
new nanostructured electrodes for Li-ion batteries - the type of battery
that powers modern laptop computers and cellular phones. We have shown
that because of the very high surface area of nanomaterials, the nanostructured
electrode can support much higher discharge currents without loss
of battery capacity. Finally, we are also conducting research on carbon
nanotube membranes, corrosion, and basic electrochemistry. |
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University
of Florida, Department of Chemistry
PO Box 117200
Gainesville, FL 32611 |
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