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Carbon Nanotubes
        By
        Bryan Sequeira
        Bertug Kaleli
        Murshed Alam
        Farooq Akbar
        Zac Lochner
What are Carbon Nanotubes ?

Carbon nanotubes are fullerene-related
structures which consist of graphene
cylinders closed at either end with caps
containing pentagonal rings
Caps




* Typical high resolution TEM image of a nanotube cap
Discovery

They were discovered in 1991
 by the Japanese electron
 microscopist Sumio Iijima who
 was studying the material
 deposited on the cathode
 during the arc-evaporation
 synthesis of fullerenes. He
 found that the central core of
 the cathodic deposit contained
 a variety of closed graphitic
 structures including
 nanoparticles and nanotubes,
 of a type which had never
previously been observed
Carbon Nanotubes:
•     This is a nanoscopic structure made of carbon atoms in the shape
    of a hollow cylinder. The cylinders are typically closed at their ends
    by semi-fullerene-like structures. There are three types of carbon
    nanotubes: armchair, zig-zag and Chiral (helical) nanotubes.
    These differ in their symmetry. Namely, the carbon nanotubes can
    be thought of as graphene planes 'rolled up' in a cylinder (the
    closing ends of carbon nanotubes cannot be obtained in this way).
    Depending on how the graphene plane is 'cut' before rolled up, the
    three types of carbon nanotubes are obtained. Within a particular
    type, carbon nanotubes with many different radii can be found
    (depending on how large is the graphene area that is folded onto a
    cylinder). These tubes can be extremely long (several hundreds of
    nanometers and more). Some consider them as special cases of
    fullerenes. When produced in materials, carbon nanotubes pack
    either in bundles (one next to another within a triangular lattice) -
    single-walled carbon nanotubes, or one of smaller radius inside
    others of larger radii - multi-walled carbon nanotubes. Carbon
    nanotubes have already found several technological applications,
    including their application in high-field emission displays. Carbon
    nanotubes were discovered by Sumio Ijima in 1991.
The way to
find out how
the carbon
atoms are
arranged in a
molecule can
be done by
joining the
vector
coordinates
of the atoms.
By this way it
can be
identified
whether if the
carbon
atoms are
arranged in a
zig-
zag, armchai
r or in a
helical
shape.
Nanotubes are formed by rolling
   up a graphene sheet into a
 cylinder and capping each end
with half of a fullerene molecule.
Shown here is a (5, 5) armchair
 nanotube (top), a (9, 0) zigzag
nanotube (middle) and a (10, 5)
chiral nanotube. The diameter of
 the nanotubes depends on the
        values of n and m.
Nanotubes
Nanotubes
Process in ARC discharge
• Carbon is vaporized between two carbon electrodes
• Small diameter, single-wall nanotubes can be
  synthesized using a Miller XTM 304 dc arc welder to
  maintain the optimal settings between two horizontal
  electrodes in helium or argon atmospheres.
• The voltage is controlled by an automatic feedback
  loop that senses the voltage differences between the
  two electrodes and adjusts them accordingly.
Laser Vaporization
Consist of three parts:
•Laser
•Optical Delay: The optical delay is used to
delay mostly the 1064nm when in use with
another line
• Reactor
Arc discharge method                Chemical vapor                      Laser ablation
                                        deposition                        (vaporization)

Connect two graphite rods to a    Place substrate in oven, heat      Blast graphite with intense
  power supply, place them         to 600 C, and slowly add a        laser pulses; use the laser
 millimeters apart, and throw     carbon-bearing gas such as       pulses rather than electricity to
 switch. At 100 amps, carbon     methane. As gas decomposes          generate carbon gas from
  vaporizes in a hot plasma.        it frees up carbon atoms,      which the NTs form; try various
                                 which recombine in the form of    conditions until hit on one that
                                                NTs                produces prodigious amounts
                                                                             of SWNTs



   Can produce SWNT and           Easiest to scale to industrial   Primarily SWNTs, with a large
  MWNTs with few structural         production; long length         diameter range that can be
           defects                                                    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.




    •Carbon nanotube fibers
    under an electron
    microscope
•   Light Emitting Polymer Technology
    Light Emitting Polymer technology is leading to a new class of flat panel displays.
    Researchers have discovered that Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) could be made from
    polymers as well as from traditional semiconductors. It was found that the polymer poly p-
    phenylenevinylene (PPV) emitted yellow-green light when sandwiched between a pair of
    electrodes. Initially this proved to be of little practical value as it produced an efficiency of
    less than 0.01%. However, by changing the chemical composition of the polymer and the
    structure of the device, an efficiency of 5% was achieved, bringing it well into the range of
    conventional LEDs.
    Some Amazing facts and Applications
•   Carbon Nanotubes possess many unique and remarkable properties
    (chemical, physical, and mechanical), which make them desirable for many applications.
    The slender proportions of carbon nanotubes hide a staggering strength: it is estimated
    that they are 100 times stronger than steel at only one sixth of the weight - almost certainly
    the strongest fibres that will ever be made out of anything - strong enough even to build an
    elevator to space. In addition they conduct electricity better than copper and transmit heat
    better than diamond.
•   Enhancements in miniaturization, speed and power consumption, size reduction of
    information processing devices, memory storage devices and flat displays for visualization
    are currently being developed
•   The most immediate application for nanotubes is in making strong, lightweight materials. It
    will be possible to build a car that is lighter than its human driver, yet strong enough to
    survive a collision with a tank
•   Aircraft built with stronger and lighter materials will have longer life spans and will fly at
    higher temperatures, faster and more efficiently.
    Nanotubes are being explored as receptacles - storage tanks - for hydrogen molecules to
    be used in the fuel cell that could power automobiles of the future. Hydrogen does not
    produce pollution or greenhouse emissions when burned and is considered to be the clean
    energy of the future.
Some applications of Carbon
•
     Nanotubes include the following
    Micro-electronics / • Nanotube actuator
    semiconductors                 Molecular Quantum wires
    Conducting Composites          Hydrogen Storage
    Controlled Drug                Noble radioactive gas storage
    Delivery/release               Solar storage
    Artificial muscles             Waste recycling
    Supercapacitors                Electromagnetic shielding
    Batteries                      Dialysis Filters
    Field emission flat panel      Thermal protection
    displays                       Nanotube reinforced
    Field Effect transistors and   composites
    Single electron transistors    Reinforcement of armour and
    Nano lithography               other materials
    Nano electronics               Reinforcement of polymer
    Doping                         Avionics
    Nano balance                   Collision-protection materials
    Nano tweezers                  Fly wheels"
    Data storage
    Magnetic nanotube
    Nanogear
Picture of Carbon NanoTubes
Future Uses of CNTs
• Nano-Electronics
  – Nanotubes can be conducting or insulating
    depending on their properties
    • Diameter, length, chirality/twist,
      and number of walls
  – Joining multiple nanotubes together to make
    nanoscale diodes
  – Max Current Density: 10^13 A/cm^2
The Space Elevator
• The Idea
  – To create a tether from earth to some object
    in a geosynchronous orbit. Objects can then
    crawl up the tether into space.
  – Saves time and money
• The Problem
  – 62,000-miles (100,000-kilometers)
  – 20+ tons
The Space Elevator




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

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Nanotubes

  • 1. Carbon Nanotubes By Bryan Sequeira Bertug Kaleli Murshed Alam Farooq Akbar Zac Lochner
  • 2. What are Carbon Nanotubes ? Carbon nanotubes are fullerene-related structures which consist of graphene cylinders closed at either end with caps containing pentagonal rings
  • 3. Caps * Typical high resolution TEM image of a nanotube cap
  • 4. Discovery They were discovered in 1991 by the Japanese electron microscopist Sumio Iijima who was studying the material deposited on the cathode during the arc-evaporation synthesis of fullerenes. He found that the central core of the cathodic deposit contained a variety of closed graphitic structures including nanoparticles and nanotubes, of a type which had never previously been observed
  • 5. Carbon Nanotubes: • This is a nanoscopic structure made of carbon atoms in the shape of a hollow cylinder. The cylinders are typically closed at their ends by semi-fullerene-like structures. There are three types of carbon nanotubes: armchair, zig-zag and Chiral (helical) nanotubes. These differ in their symmetry. Namely, the carbon nanotubes can be thought of as graphene planes 'rolled up' in a cylinder (the closing ends of carbon nanotubes cannot be obtained in this way). Depending on how the graphene plane is 'cut' before rolled up, the three types of carbon nanotubes are obtained. Within a particular type, carbon nanotubes with many different radii can be found (depending on how large is the graphene area that is folded onto a cylinder). These tubes can be extremely long (several hundreds of nanometers and more). Some consider them as special cases of fullerenes. When produced in materials, carbon nanotubes pack either in bundles (one next to another within a triangular lattice) - single-walled carbon nanotubes, or one of smaller radius inside others of larger radii - multi-walled carbon nanotubes. Carbon nanotubes have already found several technological applications, including their application in high-field emission displays. Carbon nanotubes were discovered by Sumio Ijima in 1991.
  • 6. The way to find out how the carbon atoms are arranged in a molecule can be done by joining the vector coordinates of the atoms. By this way it can be identified whether if the carbon atoms are arranged in a zig- zag, armchai r or in a helical shape.
  • 7. Nanotubes are formed by rolling up a graphene sheet into a cylinder and capping each end with half of a fullerene molecule. Shown here is a (5, 5) armchair nanotube (top), a (9, 0) zigzag nanotube (middle) and a (10, 5) chiral nanotube. The diameter of the nanotubes depends on the values of n and m.
  • 10. Process in ARC discharge • Carbon is vaporized between two carbon electrodes • Small diameter, single-wall nanotubes can be synthesized using a Miller XTM 304 dc arc welder to maintain the optimal settings between two horizontal electrodes in helium or argon atmospheres. • The voltage is controlled by an automatic feedback loop that senses the voltage differences between the two electrodes and adjusts them accordingly.
  • 11. Laser Vaporization Consist of three parts: •Laser •Optical Delay: The optical delay is used to delay mostly the 1064nm when in use with another line • Reactor
  • 12. Arc discharge method Chemical vapor Laser ablation deposition (vaporization) Connect two graphite rods to a Place substrate in oven, heat Blast graphite with intense power supply, place them to 600 C, and slowly add a laser pulses; use the laser millimeters apart, and throw carbon-bearing gas such as pulses rather than electricity to switch. At 100 amps, carbon methane. As gas decomposes generate carbon gas from vaporizes in a hot plasma. it frees up carbon atoms, which the NTs form; try various which recombine in the form of conditions until hit on one that NTs produces prodigious amounts of SWNTs Can produce SWNT and Easiest to scale to industrial Primarily SWNTs, with a large MWNTs with few structural production; long length diameter range that can be defects 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
  • 13. 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.
  • 14. 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. •Carbon nanotube fibers under an electron microscope
  • 15. Light Emitting Polymer Technology Light Emitting Polymer technology is leading to a new class of flat panel displays. Researchers have discovered that Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) could be made from polymers as well as from traditional semiconductors. It was found that the polymer poly p- phenylenevinylene (PPV) emitted yellow-green light when sandwiched between a pair of electrodes. Initially this proved to be of little practical value as it produced an efficiency of less than 0.01%. However, by changing the chemical composition of the polymer and the structure of the device, an efficiency of 5% was achieved, bringing it well into the range of conventional LEDs. Some Amazing facts and Applications • Carbon Nanotubes possess many unique and remarkable properties (chemical, physical, and mechanical), which make them desirable for many applications. The slender proportions of carbon nanotubes hide a staggering strength: it is estimated that they are 100 times stronger than steel at only one sixth of the weight - almost certainly the strongest fibres that will ever be made out of anything - strong enough even to build an elevator to space. In addition they conduct electricity better than copper and transmit heat better than diamond. • Enhancements in miniaturization, speed and power consumption, size reduction of information processing devices, memory storage devices and flat displays for visualization are currently being developed • The most immediate application for nanotubes is in making strong, lightweight materials. It will be possible to build a car that is lighter than its human driver, yet strong enough to survive a collision with a tank • Aircraft built with stronger and lighter materials will have longer life spans and will fly at higher temperatures, faster and more efficiently. Nanotubes are being explored as receptacles - storage tanks - for hydrogen molecules to be used in the fuel cell that could power automobiles of the future. Hydrogen does not produce pollution or greenhouse emissions when burned and is considered to be the clean energy of the future.
  • 16. Some applications of Carbon • Nanotubes include the following Micro-electronics / • Nanotube actuator semiconductors Molecular Quantum wires Conducting Composites Hydrogen Storage Controlled Drug Noble radioactive gas storage Delivery/release Solar storage Artificial muscles Waste recycling Supercapacitors Electromagnetic shielding Batteries Dialysis Filters Field emission flat panel Thermal protection displays Nanotube reinforced Field Effect transistors and composites Single electron transistors Reinforcement of armour and Nano lithography other materials Nano electronics Reinforcement of polymer Doping Avionics Nano balance Collision-protection materials Nano tweezers Fly wheels" Data storage Magnetic nanotube Nanogear
  • 17. Picture of Carbon NanoTubes
  • 18. Future Uses of CNTs • Nano-Electronics – Nanotubes can be conducting or insulating depending on their properties • Diameter, length, chirality/twist, and number of walls – Joining multiple nanotubes together to make nanoscale diodes – Max Current Density: 10^13 A/cm^2
  • 19. The Space Elevator • The Idea – To create a tether from earth to some object in a geosynchronous orbit. Objects can then crawl up the tether into space. – Saves time and money • The Problem – 62,000-miles (100,000-kilometers) – 20+ tons
  • 20. The Space Elevator Pictures from http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/space_elevator_020327-1.html
  • 21. 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