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New Method Sorts Nanotubes By Size
Rice University scientists have developed the first
method for sorting semiconducting carbon nanotubes based
on their size, a long-awaited development that could
form the basis of a nanotube purification system capable
of producing the necessary feedstocks for nano-circuits,
therapeutic agents, next-generation power cables and
more.
Nanotubes, tiny cylinders of carbon no wider than a
strand of DNA, possess a tantalizing array of properties
coveted by materials scientists. Nanotubes are stronger
than steel, but weigh one sixth as much. Some varieties
are excellent semiconductors, while others are metals
that conduct electricity as well as copper.
But there are dozens of varieties of nanotubes, each
slightly different in size and atomic structure and
each with very different properties. For many applications,
engineers need to use just one type of nanotube, but
that's not possible today because all production methods
turn out a mishmash of types.
"People have developed sorting methods based on
both chemical and electrical properties, but ours is
the first that's capable of sorting semiconducting nanotubes
based upon their dielectric constant, which is determined
by their diameter," said corresponding author,
Howard Schmidt, executive director of Rice's Carbon
Nanotechnology Laboratory (CNL).
To sort nanotubes, the CNL team built a system that
capitalizes on the fact that each type of nanotube has
a unique dielectric constant – a term that refers
to a material's ability to store electrostatic energy.
CNL scientists created an electrified chamber and pumped
a solution of dissolved nanotubes through it. The chamber
traps metallic nanotubes and causes semiconducting varieties
to float at different levels in the chamber. The smaller
the diameter of the nanotube, the larger the dielectric
constant and the lower in the system the tubes float.
By varying the speed of flow through the system –
with upper-level currents traveling faster than lower-level
currents – the scientists were able to collect
samples that had three times more small tubes than large
and vice versa.
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