|
Method
Could Help Carbon Nanotubes Become Commercially Viable
Single-walled
carbon nanotubes are coated in soap-like molecules called
surfactants, then spun at tens of thousands of rotations per
minute in an ultracentrifuge. The resulting density gradient
sorts the nanotubes according to diameter, twist and
electronic structure.
Credit: Zina Deretsky (adapted
from Arnold et al.), National Science Foundation
|
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Carbon
nanotubes are intriguing new materials which have been highly
touted for their exceptional mechanical, thermal, optical and
electrical properties.
Researchers worldwide are
striving to apply these nanostructures in electronics,
high-resolution displays, high-strength composites and
biosensors. A fundamental problem relating to their synthesis,
however, has limited their widespread use.
Current methods for
synthesizing carbon nanotubes produce mixtures of tubes that
differ in their diameter and twist. Variations in electronic
properties arise from these structural differences, resulting in
carbon nanotubes that are unsuitable for most proposed
applications.
Now, a new method developed at
Northwestern University for sorting single-walled carbon
nanotubes promises to overcome this problem. The method works by
exploiting subtle differences in the buoyant densities of carbon
nanotubes as a function of their size and electronic behavior.
“Carbon nanotubes,
because of their ultra-small size and excellent materials
properties, have excited the scientific community for the last
decade,” said Mark Hersam, professor of materials science
and engineering at Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering
and Applied Science, who led the research team.
“However, due to their
inherent heterogeneity, they have not yet realized their full
commercial potential,” he said. “A scalable and
economical method for producing monodisperse carbon nanotubes
will enable the proposed applications for these nanomaterials to
be explored at an industrially relevant scale.”
Using the Northwestern method,
carbon nanotubes first are encapsulated in water by soap-like
molecules called surfactants. Next, the surfactant-coated
nanotubes are sorted in density gradients which are spun at tens
of thousands of rotations per minute in an ultracentrifuge. By
carefully choosing the surfactants utilized during
ultracentrifugation, the researchers found that carbon nanotubes
could be sorted by diameter and electronic structure.
As a part of their study, the
researchers demonstrated the fabrication of electrical devices
that displayed either semiconducting or metallic behavior,
depending on the sorted nanotubes used. The researchers also
maintain that their technique can be translated to an industrial
scale.
“The technique is
especially promising for commercial applications,” said
Hersam, “because large-scale ultracentrifuges have already
been developed and shown to be economically viable in the
pharmaceutical industry. We anticipate that this precedent can be
straightforwardly translated to the production of monodisperse
carbon nanotubes.”
In addition to Hersam, other
authors on the paper are Samuel Stupp, Board of Trustees
Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and of Chemistry
and a professor of medicine; James Hulvat, research assistant
professor of materials science and engineering; and graduate
students Michael Arnold and Alexander Green, all from
Northwestern.
The research was supported by
the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Army Telemedicine and
Advanced Technology Research Center and the Department of Energy.
Source
/ Credit: Northwestern University
|