Carbon nanotubes devices may have a limit to how 'nano' they can be
Energy Safety Research Institute shows decontaminating nanotubes can simplify nanoscale devices
Summary:
Carbon nanotubes bound for electronics not only need to be as clean as
possible to maximize their utility in next-generation nanoscale devices,
but contact effects may limit how small a nano device can be, according
to researchers.
Carbon nanotubes graphic.
Carbon nanotubes bound for electronics not
only need to be as clean as possible to maximize their utility in
next-generation nanoscale devices, but contact effects may limit how
small a nano device can be, according to researchers at the Energy
Safety Research Institute (ESRI) at Swansea University in collaboration
with researchers at Rice University.
ESRI Director Andrew Barron, also a professor at Rice University in
the USA, and his team have figured out how to get nanotubes clean enough
to obtain reproducible electronic measurements and in the process not
only explained why the electrical properties of nanotubes have
historically been so difficult to measure consistently, but have shown
that there may be a limit to how "nano" future electronic devices can be
using carbon nanotubes.
Like any normal wire, semiconducting nanotubes are progressively more
resistant to current along their length. But conductivity measurements
of nanotubes over the years have been anything but consistent. The ESRI
team wanted to know why.
"We are interested in the creation of nanotube based conductors, and
while people have been able to make wires their conduction has not met
expectations. We were interested in determining the basic sconce behind
the variability observed by other researchers."
They discovered that hard-to-remove contaminants -- leftover iron
catalyst, carbon and water -- could easily skew the results of
conductivity tests. Burning them away, Barron said, creates new
possibilities for carbon nanotubes in nanoscale electronics.
The new study appears in the American Chemical Society journal Nano Letters.
The researchers first made multiwalled carbon nanotubes between 40
and 200 nanometers in diameter and up to 30 microns long. They then
either heated the nanotubes in a vacuum or bombarded them with argon
ions to clean their surfaces.
They tested individual nanotubes the same way one would test any
electrical conductor: By touching them with two probes to see how much
current passes through the material from one tip to the other. In this
case, their tungsten probes were attached to a scanning tunneling
microscope.
In clean nanotubes, resistance got progressively stronger as the
distance increased, as it should. But the results were skewed when the
probes encountered surface contaminants, which increased the electric
field strength at the tip. And when measurements were taken within 4
microns of each other, regions of depleted conductivity caused by
contaminants overlapped, further scrambling the results.
"We think this is why there's such inconsistency in the literature," Barron said.
"If nanotubes are to be the next generation lightweight conductor,
then consistent results, batch-to-batch, and sample-to-sample, is needed
for devices such as motors and generators as well as power systems."
Annealing the nanotubes in a vacuum above 200 degrees Celsius (392
degrees Fahrenheit) reduced surface contamination, but not enough to
eliminate inconsistent results, they found. Argon ion bombardment also
cleaned the tubes, but led to an increase in defects that degrade
conductivity.
Ultimately they discovered vacuum annealing nanotubes at 500 degrees
Celsius (932 Fahrenheit) reduced contamination enough to accurately
measure resistance, they reported.
To now, Barron said, engineers who use nanotube fibers or films in
devices modify the material through doping or other means to get the
conductive properties they require. But if the source nanotubes are
sufficiently decontaminated, they should be able to get the right
conductivity by simply putting their contacts in the right spot.
"A key result of our work was that if contacts on a nanotube are less
than 1 micron apart, the electronic properties of the nanotube changes
from conductor to semiconductor, due to the presence of overlapping
depletion zones" said Barron, "this has a potential limiting factor on
the size of nanotube based electronic devices -- this would limit the
application of Moore's law to nanotube devices."
Chris Barnett of Swansea is lead author of the paper. Co-authors are
Cathren Gowenlock and Kathryn Welsby, and Rice alumnus Alvin Orbaek
White of Swansea. Barron is the Sêr Cymru Chair of Low Carbon Energy and
Environment at Swansea and the Charles W. Duncan Jr.-Welch Professor of
Chemistry and a professor of materials science and nanoengineering at
Rice.
The Welsh Government Sêr Cymru National Research Network in Advanced
Engineering and Materials, the Sêr Cymru Chair Program, the Office of
Naval Research and the Robert A. Welch Foundation supported the
research.
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