ARGONNE,
Ill. (September 9, 2005) – The newest promising material
for advanced technology applications is diamond nanotubes,
and research at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne
National Laboratory is giving new insight into the
nature of nanodiamond.
Argonne researcher Amanda Barnard, theorist in the
Center for Nanoscale Materials, is working with colleagues
at two Italian universities who produced innovative
diamond-coated nanotubes.
The diamond-coated tubes resemble a stick of rock
candy, holding a layer of diamond 20 to 100 nm thick.
A nanometer is one millionth of a millimeter. The
period at the end of this sentence is about one million
nanometers long. The technology in its fledgling
state has already caught the eye of the electronics
industry for the promise of ultra thin televisions
with cathode ray tube-like quality picture at a fraction
of today's current flat panel television costs.
Diamond offers an amazing array of medical and technological
possibilities. Wire molecules can be attached to
it and diamond has superior light emission properties.
While diamond is an insulating material, the surface
is highly electronegative. A nanodiamond coating
consists of pure surface diamond. This gives a diamond
coated nanowire conductance from the nanotubes and
the superior conduction from the diamond. Add to
this superior light emission properties and very
low voltage requirements, and the possibility exists
for very flat, low energy displays.
"By using a more efficient conductor, nanotubes,
with a more efficient field emitter, in this case
nanodiamonds, you get more efficient devices," said
Barnard. "A lot of groups are looking for something
better to make electronic displays out of, and this
is just another candidate that looks very promising."
Researchers from the University La Sapienza and
the University Tor Vergata discovered the ability
for a nanotube to grow nanodiamond under certain
conditions in 2004, but did not know the specifics
of how the diamond grew. To better understand the
conditions that brought them their discovery, researchers
from the group brought their discovery to Barnard.
Barnard, a postdoc from the Royal Melbourne Institute
of Technology University, published her original
results on the modeling of diamond nanowires in the
October 2003 issue of Nano Letters. Her theories
earned her the recognition of the Italian group and
she was approached in March of 2004 to help with
calculations on their discovery.
"They could make them, but they couldn't understand
exactly what was happening or how they were forming," said
Barnard. "They knew what it was, they could characterize
it, but they didn't know how the growth progressed."
Barnard
calculated that during the process of etching – the
term for the degradation of nanotubes – atomic hydrogen
can change the hybridization of chemical bonds between
carbon atoms of a nanotube.
"Traditionally
in a hydrogen environment carbon nanotubes would
fall apart and disintegrate, but something different
was happening. We actually established that if
the amount of hydrogen present [is in correct proportion],
the defects that form will nucleate into diamond
before there is a chance to etch."
These imperfections that form uniformly across the
nanotube's surface allow for the bonding of diamond
molecules, which then begin to grow the length of
the tube. An added bonus property is that the end
of the nanotube is coated with a thicker bulb of
nanodiamond and upon formation the structures stand
upright without manipulation.
Barnard is now on a fellowship at Oxford University,
but is continuing to conduct research at the Center
for Nanoscale Materials, now under construction.
Barnard has great expectations for the opportunities
the new center will open up for nanoscale research.
"I hope that the CNM will give me more opportunity
to collaborate with experimental groups," said Barnard. "I
am a great advocate of doing experimentally relevant
theory, and the CNM will be a great place for doing
that."
The Center for Nanoscale Materials at Argonne is
being built with funding from the Department of Energy
Office of Science and the State of Illinois, each
of which is contributing $35 million to construction
and instrumentation of the facility.
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The nation's first national laboratory, Argonne
National Laboratory conducts basic and applied scientific
research across a wide spectrum of disciplines, ranging
from high-energy physics to climatology and biotechnology.
Since 1990, Argonne has worked with more than 600
companies and numerous federal agencies and other
organizations to help advance America's scientific
leadership and prepare the nation for the future.
Argonne is operated by the University of Chicago
for the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science.
Contact: Donna Jones Pelkie
djpelkie@anl.gov
630-252-5501
DOE/Argonne National Laboratory
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