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LOS
ALAMOS, N.M., Sept. 13, 2004 -- University of California
scientists working at Los Alamos National Laboratory
in collaboration with chemists from Duke University
have recently grown a world record-length four-centimeter-long,
single-wall carbon nanotube.
Single-wall carbon nanotubes have a number of revolutionary
uses, including being spun into fibers or yarns that
are more than 10 times stronger than any current structural
material. In addition to uses in lightweight, high-strength
applications, these new long metallic nanotubes also
will enable new types of nanoscale electro-mechanical
systems such as micro-electric motors, nanoscale diodes,
and nanoconducting cable for wiring micro-electronic
devices.
In research reported in the current online issue of
the journal Nature Materials, Yuntian Zhu and his
colleagues discuss how they created a single-wall
carbon nanotube using a process called catalytic chemical
vapor deposition from ethanol (alcohol) vapor. Discovered
in 1991 by Japanese scientist Sumio Iijima, carbon
nanotubes are cylindrical carbon molecules that are
very similar in structure to a fullerene, or buckyball,
but instead of being a sphere, the nanotube is tubular
in shape. Until the advent of the Los Alamos/Duke
discovery, the length of carbon nanotubes had previously
been limited to a few millimeters.
Zhu, a scientist in the Materials Science and Technology
Division, said, "although this discovery is really
only a beginning, the continued development of longer
length carbon nanotubes could result in nearly endless
applications. Actually, the potential uses for long
carbon nanotubes are probably limited only by our
imagination."
Long metallic carbon nanotubes can be used to create
a bio/chemical sensor in one segment while the rest
of the nanotube can act as a conductor to transmit
the signal. Other uses include applications in nanoscale
electronics, where the nanotubes can be used as conducting
or insulating materials. For example, joining together
two nanoscale carbon tubes with differing electronic
properties could create nanoscale diodes. Even more
promising are uses that take advantage of the astonishing
strength of the tubes, such as in the creation of
super strong carbon nanotube yarns.
In addition to Zhu, other members of the nanotube
team included Lianxi Zheng, Stephen Doorn, Yonghao
Zhao, Elshan Akhadov, Mark A. Hoffbauer, Bobbi Roop,
Quanxi Jia, Robert Dye and Dean Peterson from Los
Alamos and Shaoming Huang and Jie Liu from the Chemistry
Department at Duke University in Durham, N.C.
The research was conducted under the auspices of the
Los Alamos Superconductivity Technology Center with
funding from the Los Alamos Laboratory-Directed Research
and Development (LDRD) program. LDRD funds basic and
applied research and development focusing on employee-initiated
creative proposals selected at the discretion of the
Laboratory director.
Los Alamos National Laboratory is operated by the
University of California for the National Nuclear
Security Administration (NNSA) of the U.S. Department
of Energy and works in partnership with NNSA's Sandia
and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories to support
NNSA in its mission.
Los Alamos enhances global security by ensuring the
safety and reliability of the U.S. nuclear deterrent,
developing technologies to reduce threats from weapons
of mass destruction, and solving problems related
to defense, energy, environment, infrastructure, health
and national security concerns.
Source : DOE/Los Alamos National Laboratory
Contact: Todd Hanson, tahanson@lanl.gov, (505) 665-2085
(04-076)
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