РОССИЙСКАЯ АКАДЕМИЯ НАУК УРАЛЬСКОЕ ОТДЕЛЕНИЕ ИНСТИТУТ ХИМИИ TBEPДОГО ТЕЛА |
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07.07.2008 | Карта сайта Language |
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To sort the tubes, the researchers created nanometre-thick films on modified silicon wafers by spin coating, in which a nanotube solution is dripped onto the surface of a spinning wafer. Wafers with added amine groups attracted high densities of semiconducting nanotubes, whereas those bearing phenyl groups attracted the metallic nanotubes. Although the team are still investigating the exact cause of the attraction, they think pi-electrons in the phenyl groups interact more strongly with the pi-electrons of the metallic tubes. They attribute the semiconducting tubes' attraction to amines to electrostatic interactions. The team have already made working transistors with purified semiconducting nanotubes. They also say they can fine tune the properties of their films, including the arrangement of nanotubes within them, by adjusting the spin coating conditions - from the speed of the spinning wafer to the density of the nanotube solution. LeMieux believes the most immediate application for the method will be in enriching carbon networks with metallic tubes to make transparent electrodes for solar cells. 'This will probably be the first nanoelectronics application, rather than transistors,' he says. The team are currently testing different functional groups to try to increase the density of conducting tubes in their films. Peter Ashburn, who studies carbon nanotubes at the University of Southampton, says the study addresses one of the major challenges in nanoelectronics. But he believes other difficult problems remain. 'Solving the metallic-semiconducting split is an important step, but the main problem is that carbon nanotubes are just so variable,' he says. 'It's hype thinking that carbon nanotubes are going to go into industry for general electronics any time in the next 20 years.' Hayley Birch
Interesting? Spread the word using the 'tools' menu on the left. ReferencesM C LeMieux et al, Science, 2008, 321, 101 (DOI: 10.1126/science.1156588)
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