Durham,
N.C. -- "Nanotubes" grown in the busy laboratory
of associate chemistry professor Jie
Liu were crucial to IBM scientists' recent announcements
of a new source of light emissions. Liu's lab is
also working with a California firm to pioneer use
of these infinitesimally-thin carbon tubes in place
of copper contacts for computer chips.
These
are just the latest examples of Liu's group's work
with nanotubes, sometimes nicknamed "buckytubes" because
of their architectural similarities to soccer-ball
shaped molecules of carbon called buckminsterfullerines
or "buckyballs.
These
single-atom-thick cylinders of carbon are attracting
scientific and industrial attention for their unusual
and useful properties. They are called nanotubes
because their diameters are measured in the billionths
of a meter, the prefix "nano" meaning "billionths."
Even though they are ultra thin and ultra light,
nanotubes form exceptionally strong, stiff and tough
fibers that conduct heat and electricity exceptionally
well and can even be made to self-assemble. Nanotubes
of sufficient purity also have unusual electrical
properties, behaving either like semiconductors or
like metals depending on their specific molecular
architectures.
All these properties make them strong candidates
to become the basis of futuristic molecular-scale
nanoelectronic circuitry and nanostructures, said
Liu, who came to Duke from the Rice University laboratory
of a buckyball and buckytube pioneer -- the late
Nobel laureate Richard Smalley.
In an April, 2003 online edition of the Journal
of the American Chemical Society, Liu and members
of his group announced a method to grow exceptionally
stretched-out nanotubes that -- while they measure
the usual few nanometers in width -- can extend well
beyond the nano scale for more than 2 millimeters
in length.
Liu's lab has since begun supplying long nanotubes
to IBM, where company scientists found the tiny structures
can serve as microscopic light emitters when made
components of experimental transistors.
In the Nov. 18 issue of the journal Science, in
a paper that included Liu and his graduate student
Qiang Fu as coauthors, an IBM team led by Phaedon
Avouris reported achieving unprecidentedly bright
infrared light outputs using a modified nanotube
transistor.
The modification involved growing the nanotubes
over a tiny trench excavated in the chip's surface,
the Science authors reported. The introduction of
the trench altered electron properties in a way that
caused light to be emitted at a point of high electrical
fields where the nanotube and one trench edge intersected.
"The extraordinary current-carrying capability of
a carbon nanotube and its ultra-small size lead to
an ultra-bright light source," the authors wrote
in the paper.
"Our contribution to this project was that we are
the group that can grow nanotubes extending all the
way across the trenches," Liu said. "Other methods
wouldn't be able to do that."
While the nanotubes used for the IBM work were relatively
short, ranging in the hundredths of a millimeter,
Liu said the longest nanotubes his group is growing
measure in the centimeters.
In another project, Arrowhead Research Corp., a
Pasadena, Calif. nanotechnology firm, also announced
in November that it would work with Liu's laboratory
to develop nanotube-based interconnects that would
replace copper connectors within computer chip circuitry
that continues to miniaturize.
"As consumer demand grows for smaller and faster
chips, copper interconnects become more and more
difficult and costly to fabricate," the company announcement
said. "We believe the Duke team has a unique solution
to this problem."
Liu
said copper connectors can degrade and fail from
severe heating when required to carry considerable
current loads over increasingly small circuit dimensions. "Substituting
carbon nanotubes, in theory, can really solve this
problem," he said.
The
challenge for his group will be "to develop
a method to put nanotubes where you want them to
be in a manner that can be scaled up to full wafer
scale," Liu said. "Our main research direction will
be developing such methods."
For more information, contact: Monte
Basgall | (919) 681-8057 | monte.basgall@duke.edu
|