Carbon Nanotubes: by Bryan Sequeira Bertug Kaleli Murshed Alam Farooq Akbar Zac Lochner
Carbon Nanotubes: by Bryan Sequeira Bertug Kaleli Murshed Alam Farooq Akbar Zac Lochner
Carbon Nanotubes: by Bryan Sequeira Bertug Kaleli Murshed Alam Farooq Akbar Zac Lochner
By
Bryan Sequeira
Bertug Kaleli
Murshed Alam
Farooq Akbar
Zac Lochner
What are Carbon Nanotubes ?
Connect two graphite rods to a Place substrate in oven, heat to Blast graphite with intense laser
power supply, place them 600 C, and slowly add a carbon- pulses; use the laser pulses rather
millimeters apart, and throw bearing gas such as methane. As than electricity to generate carbon
switch. At 100 amps, carbon gas decomposes it frees up carbon gas from which the NTs form; try
vaporizes in a hot plasma. atoms, which recombine in the various conditions until hit on one
form of NTs that produces prodigious amounts
of SWNTs
Can produce SWNT and MWNTs Easiest to scale to industrial Primarily SWNTs, with a large
with few structural defects production; long length diameter range that can be
controlled by varying the reaction
temperature
Tubes tend to be short with NTs are usually MWNTs and By far the most costly, because
random sizes and directions often riddled with defects requires expensive lasers
Uses of Carbon NanoTubes
• Since discovering them more than a decade ago, scientists have been exploring possible uses
for carbon nanotubes, which exhibit electrical conductivity as high as copper, thermal
conductivity as high as diamond, and as much as 100 times the strength of steel at one-sixth the
weight. In order to capitalize on these properties, researchers and engineers need a set of tools --
in this case, chemical processes like pyrolytic fluorination -- that will allow them to cut, sort,
dissolve and otherwise manipulate nanotubes.
• Molecular and Nanotube Memories
Nanotubes hold promise for non-volatile memory; with a commercial prototype nanotube-based
RAM predicted in 1-2 years, and terabit capacity memories ultimately possible. Similar promises
have been made of molecular memory from several companies, with one projecting a low-cost
memory based on molecule-sized cylinders by end 2004 that will have capacities appropriate for
the flash memory market. These approaches offer non-volatile memory and if the predicted
capacities of up to 1Tb can be achieved at appropriate cost then hard drives may no longer be
necessary in PCs.
Laser applications heat up for carbon nanotubes
• 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.
Nanoelectronics
• Nanotubes are either conducting or semi-conducting depending upon their structure (or their
'twist') so they could be very useful in electronic circuitry. Nanotube Ropes/Fibers: These
have great potential if the SWNT's can be made slightly longer they have the potential to
become the next generation of carbon fibers. Carbon nanotubes additionally can also be used
to produce nanowires of other chemicals, such as gold or zinc oxide. These nanowires in turn
can be used to cast nanotubes of other chemicals, such as gallium nitride. These can have
very different properties from CNTs - for example, gallium nitride nanotubes are hydrophilic,
while CNTs are hydrophobic, giving them possible uses in organic chemistry that CNTs could
not be used for.
• Display Technologies
Nanomaterials will help extend the range of ways in which we display information. Several
groups are promising consumer flat screens based on nanotubes by the end of 2003 or
shortly after (Carbon nanotubes are excellent field emitters). E-paper is another much
heralded application and nanoparticles figure in several approaches being investigated, some
of which promise limited commercialization in the next year or two. Soft lithography is another
technology being applied in this area.
Pictures from
http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/space_elevator_020327-1.html
The Space Elevator
• The Solution: Carbon Nanotubes
– 10x the tensile strengh (30GPa)
• 1 atm = 101.325kPA
• 10-30% fracture strain
• Further Obstacles
– Production of Nanofibers
• Record length 4cm
– Investment Capital: $10 billion