UPDATE






World's Smallest Test Tubes

Researchers use tiny carbon nanotubes to carry out a chemical reaction

By John Toon

A TEAM OF RESEARCHERS from three institutions has carried out a chemical reaction in what may be the world's smallest set of test tubes: carbon nanotubes with inside diameters of less than ten nanometers and lengths of just one micron.
photo courtesy Walter A. de Heer
This high-resolution electron micrograph shows a nanotube filled with silver bead particles. Each dark bead is less than 20 nanometers long. (150-dpi JPEG version - 240k)

The work could ultimately have important applications in microelectronics and other fields in which extremely small conductors and other structures would allow production of new types of nanoscale devices.

"We have demonstrated that you can put materials into nanotubes and manipulate them to induce a chemical reaction," says Dr. Walter A. de Heer, a professor in the School of Physics at Georgia Tech. "This work opens up new ways of thinking about structures that can act like extremely small test tubes."

In work conducted at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne in Switzerland, de Heer and his collaborators formed carbon nanotubes using well-established techniques. They opened the ends of the tubes and allowed capillary action to fill them with molten silver nitrate (AgNO3). In the final step of the process, they decomposed the silver nitrate into metallic silver by heating the tubes with a beam from an electron microscope.

The process resulted in chains of tiny silver beads within many of the nanotubes, each bead separated by a pocket of gas under pressure estimated to be as high as 1,300 atmospheres. Though not attached to the nanotube walls, the beads remain wedged in place by high levels of friction.

Electron microscope study showed some thinning of the nanotube walls, indicating that the chemical reaction involved in metallizing the silver nitrate caused some damage. However, because the tubes are made up of multiple layers of carbon, the thinning of the walls should not diminish their ability to host chemical reactions.

The researchers, including D. Ugarte of the Laboratorio Nacional de Luz Sincotron in Brazil and A. Chatelain of the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, found that only a small percentage of the nanotubes -- those with diameters of at least four nanometers -- were filled with the silver nitrate.
photo courtesy Walter A. de Heer
This electron micrograph offers a detailed view of silver beads and the eroded layers of the nanotube. (150-dpi JPEG version - 360k)

This shows that the capillary action used to fill the tubes depends on the diameter of the nanotubes. Says de Heer: "If the diameter is relatively large, the liquid will go in easily, but if the tube is narrow, the liquid might not go in at all."

The relationship between size and capillary action is opposite of what would be expected in the "macro" world, where narrower tubes normally create a stronger attraction for liquids. But in nanoscale structures like the tiny tubes, de Heer believes the cylindrical shape alters electrical charges to cause reduced reactivity.

"The polarizability of the inner wall of the tube is reduced," de Heer explains. "The reactivity of the inner walls was lower when the tube diameter shrunk below a certain size."

Based on their studies, the researchers developed mathematical formulas that can be used to predict the capillary action associated with tubes of different diameters. Even small differences in the polarizations of the nanotubes had significant effects on the amount of capillary action.

Now that they have demonstrated that chemical reactions can be carried out within the nanotubes, the researchers would like to produce a continuous metallic wire. Such a structure would be "a new kind of conductor:" a metallic wire with a graphitic sheath around it.

"Microelectronic applications for carbon nanotubes are already indicated," de Heer adds. "We see the potential for doping materials and for chemical reactions inside the nanotubes."

The technique could also be used in flat panel displays, to produce encapsulated compounds or to create other elongated nanostructures using a wide range of materials that will flow by capillary action. It provides an alternative to the electric arc techniques previously used to fill nanotubes.

Carbon nanotubes have intrigued researchers because of their size. The research team that includes de Heer has previously investigated the electronic properties of closed tubes, particularly in applications where they could be electron emitters.

The work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation. It was reported in the Dec. 13, 1996 issue of the journal Science.

Further information is available from Dr. Walter A. de Heer, School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332-0430. (Telephone: 404/894-6814) (E-mail: deheer@nxs.gatech.edu)


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Last updated: May 30, 1997