RICHARDSON,
Texas (Aug. 18, 2005) – University of Texas at Dallas
(UTD) nanotechnologists and an Australian colleague
have produced transparent carbon nanotube sheets
that are stronger than the same-weight steel sheets
and have demonstrated applicability for organic light-emitting
displays, low-noise electronic sensors, artificial
muscles, conducting appliqués and broad-band
polarized light sources that can be switched in one
ten-thousandths of a second.
Carbon nanotubes are like minute bits of string,
and untold trillions of these invisible strings must
be assembled to make useful macroscopic articles
that can exploit the phenomenal mechanical and electronic
properties of the individual nanotubes. In the Aug.
19 issue of the prestigious journal Science , scientists
from the NanoTech Institute at UTD and a collaborator,
Dr. Ken Atkinson from Commonwealth Scientific and
Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), a national
laboratory in Australia, report such assembly of
nanotubes into sheets at commercially useable rates.
Starting from chemically grown, self-assembled structures
in which nanotubes are aligned like trees in a forest,
the sheets are produced at up to seven meters per
minute by the coordinated rotation of a trillion
nanotubes per minute for every centimeter of sheet
width. By comparison, the production rate for commercial
wool spinning is 20 meters per minute. Unlike previous
sheet fabrication methods using dispersions of nanotubes
in liquids, which are quite slow, the dry-state process
developed by the UTD-CSIRO team can use the ultra-long
nanotubes needed for optimization of properties.
Strength normalized to weight is important for many
applications, especially in space and aerospace,
and this property of the nanotube sheets already
exceeds that of the strongest steel sheets and the
Mylar and Kapton sheets used for ultralight air vehicles
and proposed for solar sails for space applications,
according to the researchers. The nanotube sheets
can be made so thin that a square kilometer of solar
sail would weigh only 30 kilograms. While sheets
normally have much lower strength than fibers or
yarns, the strength of the nanotube sheets in the
nanotube alignment direction already approaches the
highest reported values for polymer-free nanotube
yarns.
The nanotube sheets combine high transparency with
high electronic conductivity, are highly flexible
and provide giant gravimetric surface areas, which
has enabled the team to demonstrate their use as
electrodes for bright organic light emitting diodes
for displays and as solar cells for light harvesting.
Electrodes that can be reversibly deformed over 100
percent without losing electrical conductivity are
needed for high stroke artificial muscles, and the
Science article describes a simple method that makes
this possible for the nanotube sheets.
The
use of the nanotube sheets as planar incandescent
sources of highly polarized infrared and visible
radiation is also reported in the Science article.
Since the nanotube sheets strongly absorb microwave
radiation, which causes localized heating, the
scientists were able to utilize a kitchen microwave
oven to weld together plexiglas plates to make
a window. Neither the electrical conductivity of
the nanotube sheets nor their transparency was
affected by the welding process -- which suggests
a novel way to imbed these sheets as transparent
heating elements and antennas for car windows.
The nanotube sheets generate surprisingly low electronic
noise and have an exceptionally low dependence
of electronic conductivity on temperature. That
suggests their possible application as high-quality
sensors – which is a very active
area of nanotube research.
“Rarely is a processing advance so elegantly simple
that rapid commercialization seems possible, and
rarely does such an advance so quickly enable diverse
application demonstrations,” said the article's corresponding
author, Dr. Ray H. Baughman, Robert A. Welch Professor
of Chemistry and director of the UTD NanoTech Institute. “Synergistic
aspects of our nanotube sheet and twisted yarn fabrication
technologies likely will help accelerate the commercialization
of both technologies, and UTD and CSIRO are working
together with companies and government laboratories
to bring both technologies to the marketplace.”
The breakthroughs resulted from the diverse expertise
of the article's co-authors. Dr. Mei Zhang and Dr.
Shaoli Fang, NanoTech Institute research scientists,
first demonstrated the nanotube sheet fabrication
process, and this result was translated into diverse
applications by the entire team. The other team members
include Dr. Anvar Zakhidov, associate director of
the NanoTech Institute; Christopher Williams, Zakhidov's
graduate student from the UTD Physics Department;
Dr. Sergey Lee and Dr. Ali Aliev, research scientists
at NanoTech Institute, in addition to Atkinson and
Baughman.
The
applications possibilities seem even much broader
than the present demonstrations, Baughman said.
For example, researchers from the Regenerative
Neurobiology Division at Texas Scottish Rite Hospital
for Children, Dr. Mario Romero, Director, and Dr.
Pedro Galvan-Garcia, Senior Researcher Associate,
and Dr. Larry Cauller, associate professor in UTD's
neuroscience program, have initial evidence suggesting
that healthy cells grow on these sheets – so they
might eventually be applied as scaffolds for tissue
growth.
Baughman said that numerous other applications possibilities
exist and are being explored at UTD, including structural
composites that are strong and tough; supercapacitors,
batteries, fuel cells and thermal-energy-harvesting
cells exploiting giant-surface-area nanotube sheet
electrodes; light sources, displays, and X-ray sources
that use the nanotube sheets as high-intensity sources
of field-emitted electrons; and heat pipes for electronic
equipment that exploit the high thermal conductivity
of nanotubes. Multifunctional applications like nanotube
sheets that simultaneously store energy and provide
structural reinforcement for a side panel of an electrically
powered vehicle also are promising, he said.
UTD researchers began collaborating with their counterparts
at CSIRO last year. In November 2004, the organizations
achieved a breakthrough by downsizing to the nanoscale
methods used to spin wool and other fibers to produce
futuristic yarns made from carbon nanotubes.
The latest research was funded by the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency, an agency of the United
States Department of Defense, the U.S. Air Force
Office of Scientific Research, the Texas Advanced
Technology Program, the Robert A. Welch Foundation
and the Strategic Partnership for Research in Nanotechnology.
To obtain a copy of the Science article, please
contact the journal at (202) 326-6440 or scipak@aaas.org .
A supplemental information file and figures describing
applications evaluations that go beyond the scope
of the Science article can also be found at scipak@aaas.org .
About UTD
The
University of Texas at Dallas, located at the convergence
of Richardson, Plano and Dallas in the heart of
the complex of major multinational technology corporations
known as the Telecom Corridor®,
enrolls more than 14,000 students. The school's freshman
class traditionally stands at the forefront of Texas
state universities in terms of average SAT scores.
The university offers a broad assortment of bachelor's,
master's and doctoral degree programs. For additional
information about UTD, please visit the university's
website at www.utdallas.edu .
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