| Carbon
nanotubes---a hot nanotechnology with many potential
uses---may find one of its quickest applications in
the next generation of standards for optical power measurements,
which are essential for laser systems used in manufacturing,
medicine, communications, lithography, space-based sensors
and other technologies.
As
described in a forthcoming paper in Applied Optics,*
scientists at the National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST) and the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory have made prototype pyroelectric detectors
coated with carbon nanotubes. Pyroelectric detectors
and other thermal detectors are the basis for all
primary standards used to ensure that laser power
and energy measurements are traceable to fundamental
units. The coating absorbs laser light and converts
it to heat, which is conducted to a detector underneath
made of pyroelectric material. The detector's rise
in temperature generates a current, which is measured
to determine the power of the laser.
Carbon
nanotubes---tiny cylinders made of carbon atoms---conduct
heat hundreds of times better than today's detector
coating materials. Nanotubes are also resistant to
laser damage and, because of their texture and crystal
properties, absorb light efficiently. Scientists hope
that the nanotubes' resistance to aging and hardening
will allow them to extend the range of NIST laser
power standards to ultraviolet wavelengths, which
would support the development and calibration of sensors
for detecting chemical and biological weapons. The
research also may contribute to the use of carbon
nanotubes in fuel cells.
As
described in the paper, the NIST-led research team
was first to demonstrate the use of an airbrush technique
to apply carbon nanotubes to a thermal detector. The
team also will report, at a workshop on carbon nanotubes
at NIST Jan. 26-28, growing multiwalled nanotubes
directly on detectors with a chemical vapor deposition
process. The team is now measuring the optical and
thermal properties of various tube compositions and
topologies, using an unusual approach that is much
faster than conventional methods.
*J.H. Lehman, C. Engtrakul, T. Gennett, and A.C. Dillon.
2005. Single-wall carbon nanotube coating on a pyroelectric
detector. Applied Optics, Vol. 44. Slated at press
time for Feb. 1.
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