Dec 23 2008
A jumbo nanotube, like a jumbo shrimp, sounds contradictory.
A giant lightweight carbon nanotube with good strength and electrical properties
is desirable, all right. A micron-sized carbon tube is easier to exploit commercially
than any (so to speak) littler nanocousin.
But is it still a nanotube?
Jianyu Huang at the joint Sandia
and Los Alamos national laboratories Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies
(CINT), with colleagues elsewhere, got around this problem by naming their new
creation “colossal carbon tubes” in a paper published in a recent
issue of Physical Review Letters.
“The structures are remarkable because they are very light, possess good
electrical conductivity, and mechanical properties similar to carbon fibers,”
Huang says.
Among possibilities of use are so-called textile electronics and body armor.
Because of their strange, surprising sponginess — walls of graphite-like
carbon kept apart by hollow, rectangular compartments — the colossal fibrous
tubes are 20 times less dense than carbon fibers, yet about the same length
— in the centimeter range. And they appear to be slightly stronger —
a very desirable, and until now unheard-of property in large carbon tubes.
The new form of carbon surprised leading nanotechnology researchers. MIT’s
carbon technology specialist Mildred Dresselhaus was quoted in an online news
article in the journal Nature: “This is a new form of carbon that was
unexpected to me.”
Huang, who did the microstructure analysis confirming that the walls of such
tubes consist of graphitic structure, describes the new creation as “a
porous, giant, carbon fiber-like tubular structure” of diameters ranging
from 40 to 100 microns. Conventional carbon nanotubes are about 10 nanometer
diameter.
The material was made at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Researchers there
led by Yuntian Zhu and Huisheng Peng found that heating ethylene and paraffin
oil produced a carbon vapor that condensed into tubes of pure carbon tens of
microns wide and up to several centimeters long. Zhu now is at North Carolina
State University, and Huisheng Peng is at Tongji University in Shanghai.