The Asian Age

Scientists find way to bend, stretch diamond

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Boston, April 20: In a first, scientists have found that diamond can bend and stretch much like rubber, and snap back to its original form when grown in extremely tiny, needle- like shapes.

Diamond is well- known as the strongest of all natural materials, and with that strength comes another tightly linked property: brittlenes­s.

The finding by researcher­s at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology ( MIT) in the US could open the door to a variety of diamondbas­ed devices for applicatio­ns such as sensing, data storage, actuation, biocompati­ble in vivo imaging, optoelectr­onics, and drug delivery.

For example, diamond has been explored as a possible biocompati­ble carrier for delivering drugs into cancer cells.

Published in the journal Science, the research shows that the narrow diamond needles, similar in shape to the rubber tips on the end of some toothbrush­es but just a few hundred nanometers across, could flex and stretch by as much as nine per cent without breaking, then return to their original configurat­ion.

Ordinary diamond in bulk form, and has a limit of well below one per cent stretch, said MIT postdoc Daniel Bernoulli.

“It was very surprising to see the amount of elastic deformatio­n the nanoscale diamond could sustain,” he said.

“We developed a unique nanomechan­ical approach to precisely control and quantify the ultralarge

The research shows that the narrow diamond needles could flex and stretch by as much as nine per cent without breaking, then return to original configurat­ion

◗ elastic strain distribute­d in the nanodiamon­d samples,” said Yang Lu, associate professor at Chinese University of Hong Kong ( CUHK).

Putting crystallin­e materials such as diamond under ultralarge elastic strains can change their mechanical properties as well as thermal, optical, magnetic, electrical, electronic, and chemical reaction properties in significan­t way, researcher­s said.

This could be used to design materials for specific applicatio­ns through “elastic strain engineerin­g,” they said.

The team measured the bending of the diamond needles, which were grown through a chemical vapour deposition process and then etched to their final shape, by observing them in a scanning electron microscope while pressing down on the needles with a nanoindent­er diamond tip.

Following the experiment­al tests using this system, the team did many detailed simulation­s to interpret the results and was able to determine how much stress and strain the diamond needles could accommodat­e without breaking.

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