Research Team Led By BC Chemistry Prof. Uses Laser
Technique To Build Micro-Structures On A Human Hair Without Harming It
First-ever demonstration has potential applications for cellular and
medical research
CHESTNUT HILL, MA (5-5-04) -- Researchers in the laboratory of Boston
College Chemistry Professor John T. Fourkas have demonstrated the
fabrication of microscopic polymeric structures on top of a human hair,
without harming it.
Fourkas, in collaboration with Boston College Physics Professor
Michael J. Naughton and Professors Malvin C. Teich and Bahaa E. A. Saleh
of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Boston
University, used a technique called multiphoton-absorption
photopolymerization (MAP), in which a polymer can be deposited at the
focal point of a laser beam; scanning of the laser beam in a desired
pattern then allows for the formation of intricate, three-dimensional
patterns. This technique, also being explored by a handful of other
groups worldwide, makes it possible to create features that are 1000
times smaller than the diameter of a human hair.
These new results show for the first time that MAP can be used to
fabricate structures nondestructively on biomaterials, and point the way
towards applications of MAP in the creation of miniature biodevices,
which could include micromanipulators for cells or even individual
protein or DNA molecules.
The findings will be published in the June 1 issue of Journal of
Applied Physics.
The originial purpose of the study was to demonstrate that intricate
and resilient structures could be created with MAP using inexpensive and
readily-available materials.
In order to demonstrate the size of the features that could be
created, the researchers fabricated structures near a human hair, and in
the course of these experiments they discovered that it was also
possible to fabricate structures on the hair itself.
"We built the structure on top of the hair with a material that is
akin to plexiglass," said Fourkas. "One of the really exciting and
unexpected things about this is that we found that we could make this
structure on the hair without harming it in any way. This suggests that
we could accomplish the same with other biological materials. One could
imagine, for instance, building devices directly on skin, blood vessels,
and eventually even a living cell. While this idea is currently in the
realm of science fiction, our results represent an important step in
that direction.
"On the level of individual cells, one can imagine making devices
that can tether cells to a surface or to each other, or that allow the
delivery of particular chemicals to the cell, or that monitor processes
within the cell," said Fourkas. "On a larger scale, if the same sort of
structures can be constructed from biocompatible materials one can
imagine applications in drug delivery and medical monitoring, among
other areas."
Three-dimensional structures created with this technique also have
the potential to be used in other miniature devices, such as optical
communications hardware: fiber optics and the hardware that is used to
interface them with electronics.
"While writing a structure on a hair does not have direct bearing on
optical communications," Fourkas said, "on the other hand, we can and
have done exactly the same sort of thing on optical fibers that are of
comparable size, and this does have direct bearing."
Shown in the image below are electron microscopy images at increasing
magnification of a representative structure created on a human hair. The
strokes on the letters are more than 20 times smaller than the diameter
of the hair. The researchers can readily create structures with features
that are more than ten times smaller, which further suggests that it may
ultimately prove possible to use this technique to create functional
structures directly on single cells. (PHOTO CREDIT: Christopher N.
LaFratta)
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