Stig Östlund
lördag, februari 05, 2011
This image is one of the first images ever taken of atomic bonding. The image shows the ...
This image is one of the first ever taken of atomic bonding. The image shows the electronic bonds that hold together atoms of oxygen and copper in a compound called cuprite.
More about this Image
More about this Image
In January 1999, John Spence, a regents professor of physics, led a team of Arizona State University scientists in producing the first-ever real-time images of atomic bonding. Spence and his team--research scientists Jian-Min Zuo, Moon Kim and Michael O'Keeffe--used x-ray scattering and electron diffraction techniques to capture direct images of the electronic bonds that hold together atoms of oxygen and copper in a compound called cuprite. In this image--which is real and not a computer simulation--you can see the dumbbell-shaped clouds of electrons that are shared between copper and oxygen atoms in cuprite (Cu20).
This image represents the first time the covalent bonds between atoms have ever been "seen" in cuprite. The invisible nuclei of the copper atoms are at the center of the dumbbells. Nuclei of the oxygen atoms are at the center and corners of the superimposed cube. The fuzzy green clouds are less-defined electron clouds representing covalent bonds between the copper atoms.
Many chemists do not believe that such metal-to-metal bonding can occur in this material. Cuprite is a superconductor and like many similar metal oxides, it has strange electrical properties that may now be explained by these never-before-seen bonds. The work may have broad implications for new materials used in computer compounds, medical equipment and other devices.
The National Science Foundation (NSF) supports this and other research projects at Arizona State University's Center for High Resolution Electron Microscopy, a Materials Research Science and Engineering Center. The complete findings of this work were published in the September 2, 1999 issue of the journal Nature.
(Note: The ASU MRSEC was supported by NSF at the time this research was performed.) (Year of image: 1999)
Credit: ASU Research Magazine
The National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22230, USA Tel: (703) 292-5111, FIRS: (800) 877-8339 TDD: (800) 281-8749 Celebrating 60 Years of Discovery
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