n this experiment you will analyse some innovative materials that are highly water repellent, stainless and require less cleaning thanks to their surface nano-engineering. Those materials have been developed using nature as an inspiration, since some plant leaves have exceptional properties due to their surface composition.
The property you will analyse is the superhydrophobic effect found in some leaves, such as the lotus leaf. The effect is due to interplay of surface chemistry and surface topography at the micro- and nano-level. Download the documents below to carry out the experiment and watch the information videos available below.
Translations to several languages are also availabe in the NANOYOU website.
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Experiment with natural nanomaterials - nanotechnology
1. Teachers Training Kit in Nanotechnologies Experiment Module A comprehensive training kit for teachers Experiment A Luisa Filipponi, iNANO, Aarhus University This document has been created in the context of the NANOYOU project. (WP4, Task 4.1) All information is provided “as is” and no guarantee or warranty is given that the information is fit for any particular purpose. The user thereof uses the information at its sole risk and liability. The document reflects solely the views of its authors. The European Commission is not liable for any use that may be made of the information contained therein.
2. Before you use this presentation This Power Point Presentation is part of the Experiment Module of the NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit in Nanotechnologies. MATERIAL INCLUDED IN THIS EXPERIMENT A PACKAGE : For teacher: EXPERIMENT A-TEACHER DOCUMENT For students * : EXPERIMENT A-STUDENT BACKGROUND READING EXPERIMENT A-STUDENT LABORATORY WORKSHEET LEVEL OF EXPERIMENT : Simple *These documents are available for the 11-13 and 14-18 age group in different languages DOCUMENTS CAN BE FOUND AT WWW.NANOYOU.EU This NANOYOU documents is distributed with Creative Commons Non-Commercial Share Alike Attribution, except where indicated differently. Please not that some images contained in this PPT are copyright protected, and to re-use them outside this document requires permission from original copyright holder. See slide 14 for details. DISCLAIMER : The experiments described in the following training kit use chemicals which need to be used according to MSDS specifications and according to specific school safety rules. Personal protection must be taken as indicated. As with all chemicals, use precautions. Solids should not be inhaled and contact with skin, eyes or clothing should be avoided. Wash hands thoroughly after handling. Dispose as indicated. All experiments must be conducted in the presence of an educator trained for science teaching. All experiments will be carried out at your own risk. Aarhus University (iNANO) and the entire NANOYOU consortium assume no liability for damage or consequential losses sustained as a result of the carrying out of the experiments described.
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9. Structure and function of casein micelles Casein micelles have an intricate structure which is an interplay of hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions. NB . Hydrophobic interactions are temperature dependent (stronger at elevated temperatures) Figure 5 . Casein milk nanostructure (Image credit: see slide 14)
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13. Running experiment A in class 1. Start with a discussion on natural nanomaterials . What are they? Let the students think of materials they know already and/or discuss examples such as gecko, butterflies, bones, or biological nanostructures such as DNA, ferritin, chlorophyll etc. 2. Discuss the relationship between structure and function . This can start from the macro-level (e.g., structure of a building to serve its function to resist a hearth wake) and move to the nanoscale. 3. Discuss with the students what they know about gelatine and milk . What happens when you heat them? Or cool them? What happens if milk is left in a fridge way past its expiring date? 4. Proceed with the experiment as outlined in the next experiment. 5. Conclude with a discussion on other natural colloids such as blood, custard, smoke. Nano is all around us!
14. Images credits Figure 1 : Testing a gelatin sample with a laser pen. (Image credit: L. Filipponi, iNANO, Aarhus University, Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial ShareAlike 3.0.) Figure 2 : AFM images of a gelatine extracted from catfish revealing the presence of spherical nanostructures. (Image credit: reprinted by permission of Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd from Yang et al., Journal of Food science (2006), 72(8), pp c430-c440, copyright (2006) Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Figure 3 left: Schematic structures of caseins and their polymers. Rectangles in the images represent hydrophobic regions. Reprinted from: Horne D.S., Inter. Dairy Journal (1998), 8 (3), 171-177, with permission from Elsevier. Figure 3 middle : Dual bonding model in casein micelles, with , and k-casein depicted as indicated. Reprinted from: Horne D.S., Inter. Dairy Journal (1998), 8 (3), 171-177, with permission from Elsevier. Figure 3 right : AFM image of milk casein micelles. (Reprinted with permission from: Shekar et al., PNAS (May 23, 2006), vol. 103, no. 21, pp 8000-8005. Copyright 2006 National Academy of Sciences, U.S.A.) Figure 4 : see Figure 3 middle Figure 5: see Figure 3 (left, middle and right) Figure 6 : See Figure 3 middle