- News>
- Science
Scientists locate 23,000 single atoms for first time
Makers of hard drives want to fabricate tiny, near-perfect crystals so that they can be easily magnetised and will hold a magnetic field for a long time.
New Delhi: Scientists have for the first time managed to see the exact location of over 23,000 atoms in a particle.
Researchers led by University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in the US used a scanning electron microscope to examine a particle that was made of iron (Fe) and platinum (Pt) and only 8.4 nanometres across.
"At the nanoscale, every atom counts," Michael Farle, a physicist at the University of Duisburg-Essen in Germany.
"For example, changing the relative positions of a few Fe and Pt atoms in a FePt nanoparticle dramatically alters the particle's properties, such as its response to a magnetic field," said Farle.
Getting such an accurate picture may help materials scientists in future to create nanometre-size structures for applications such as hard drives.
Makers of hard drives want to fabricate tiny, near-perfect crystals so that they can be easily magnetised and will hold a magnetic field for a long time, Ercius noted.
(With PTI inputs)