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Carbon nanotubes physical structure

Of particular importance to carbon nanotube physics are the many possible symmetries or geometries that can be realized on a cylindrical surface in carbon nanotubes without the introduction of strain. For ID systems on a cylindrical surface, translational symmetry with a screw axis could affect the electronic structure and related properties. The exotic electronic properties of ID carbon nanotubes are seen to arise predominately from intralayer interactions, rather than from interlayer interactions between multilayers within a single carbon nanotube or between two different nanotubes. Since the symmetry of a single nanotube is essential for understanding the basic physics of carbon nanotubes, most of this article focuses on the symmetry properties of single layer nanotubes, with a brief discussion also provided for two-layer nanotubes and an ordered array of similar nanotubes. [Pg.27]

Claye, A.S., Nemes, N.M., Janossy, A., and Eischer, J.E. 2000. Structure and electronic properties of potassium-doped single-wall carbon nanotubes. Physical Review B Condensed Matter and Materials Physics 62, R4845-R4848. [Pg.280]

P.M. Ajayan and O.Z. Zhou, in Carbon Nanotubes. Synthesis, Structure, Properties and Applications, Topics in Applied Physics, Vol. 80 (Eds. M.S. Dresselhaus, G. Dresselhaus and Ph. Avouris), Springer, Heidelberg, 2001, pp.391-425. [Pg.199]

T. Miyake, and S. Saito, Quasiparticle band structure of carbon nanotubes. Physical Review B, 2003. 68(15) p. 155424. [Pg.336]

Gorrasi, G., Romeo, V., Sannino, D., Samo, M., CiambeUi, R, Vittoria, V. et al. 2007. Carbon nanotube induced structural and physical property transitions of syndiotactic polypropylene. Nanotechnology 18 275703. [Pg.263]

Dresselhaus, M.S., Dresselhaus, G., Avouris, P. Carbon nanotubes synthesis, structure, properties, and applications. In Topics in appUed physics. Springer, Berlin, New York (2001)... [Pg.57]

Accounts of Chemical Research, 35,1063-1069. Charlier, J.-C., Ebbesen, T. W., Lambin, Ph. (1996). Structural and electronic properties of pentagon-heptagon pair defects in carbon nanotubes. Physical Review B, 53,11108-11113. [Pg.855]

Kane, C. L., Mele, E. J. (1997). Size, shape, and low energy electronic structure of carbon nanotubes. Physical Review Letters, 78(10), 1932-1935. Kataura, H., Kumazawa, Y., Maniwa, Y, Umezu, I., Suzuki, S., Ohtsuka, Y, Achiba, Y. (1999). Optical properties of single-wall carbon nanotubes. Synthetic Metals, 103, 2555-2558. Khabashesku, V., Billups, W, Margrave, J. (2002). Fluorination of single-wall carbon nanotubes and subsequent derivatization reactions. Accounts of Chemical Research, 35,1087-1095. Kim, Y, Choi, J., Chang, K., Tomanek, D. (2003). Defective fullerenes and nanotubes as molecular magnets An ab initio study. Physical Review B, 68,125420. [Pg.935]

Yang, L., 8c Han, J. (2000). Electronic structure of deformed carbon nanotubes. Physical Review Letters, 85(1), 154-157. [Pg.938]

As the analytical, synthetic, and physical characterization techniques of the chemical sciences have advanced, the scale of material control moves to smaller sizes. Nanoscience is the examination of objects—particles, liquid droplets, crystals, fibers—with sizes that are larger than molecules but smaller than structures commonly prepared by photolithographic microfabrication. The definition of nanomaterials is neither sharp nor easy, nor need it be. Single molecules can be considered components of nanosystems (and are considered as such in fields such as molecular electronics and molecular motors). So can objects that have dimensions of >100 nm, even though such objects can be fabricated—albeit with substantial technical difficulty—by photolithography. We will define (somewhat arbitrarily) nanoscience as the study of the preparation, characterization, and use of substances having dimensions in the range of 1 to 100 nm. Many types of chemical systems, such as self-assembled monolayers (with only one dimension small) or carbon nanotubes (buckytubes) (with two dimensions small), are considered nanosystems. [Pg.136]

There has also been work with hydrogen storage in buckyballs or carbon nanotubes. These are microscopic structures fashioned out of carbon. This research indicates a potential storage technique using a combination of chemical and physical containment at very high temperature... [Pg.108]

Encapsulation of different entities inside the CNT channel stands alone as an alternative noncovalent functionalization approach. Many studies on the filling of carbon nanotubes with ions or molecules focus on how the presence of these fillers affects the physical properties of the tubes. From a different point of view, confinement of materials inside the cylindrical structure could be regarded as a way to protect such materials from the external environment, with the tubes acting as a nanoreactor or a nanotransporter. It is fascinating to envision specific reactions between molecules occurring inside the aromatic cylindrical framework, tailored by CNT characteristic parameters such as diameter, affinity towards specific molecules, etc. [Pg.60]

Nanocarbon structures such as fullerenes, carbon nanotubes and graphene, are characterized by their weak interphase interaction with host matrices (polymer, ceramic, metals) when fabricating composites [99,100]. In addition to their characteristic high surface area and high chemical inertness, this fact turns these carbon nanostructures into materials that are very difficult to disperse in a given matrix. However, uniform dispersion and improved nanotube/matrix interactions are necessary to increase the mechanical, physical and chemical properties as well as biocompatibility of the composites [101,102]. [Pg.79]

Three examples of particular structures of SWCNTs, depending on the orientation of the hexagons related to the tube axis, (a) armchair-type tube (0 = 30°), (b) zigzag type tube (0 - 0°), and chiral tube (0 < 0 < 30°). Reprint from Carbon, vol. 33, No. 7, Dresselhaus M.S., Dresselhaus G., Saito R., Physics of carbon nanotubes, pages 883-891, Copyright (1995) with permission from Elsevier. [Pg.310]

The past decade has led to the detection of new carbon allotropes such as fullerenes26 and carbon nanotubes,27 28 in which the presence of five-mem-bered rings allows planar polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons to fold into bent structures. One notes at the same time that these structures are not objects of controlled chemical synthesis but result from unse-lective physical processes such as laser ablation or discharge in a light arc.29 It should be noted, on the other hand, that, e.g., pyrolytic graphitization processes, incomplete combustion of hydrocarbon precursors yielding carbon black, and carbon fibers30 are all related to mechanisms of benzene formation and fusion to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. [Pg.3]

Carbon-based nanotubes (CNTs) have attracted a great deal of attention in the fields of chemistry, physics, and materials science and have been extensively studied since their initial discovery in 1991.36 Much of the excitement in this area of research stems from their unique structures, fundamental electronic and physical properties, and potential applications.37 Inspired by these carbon nanotube studies, coordination chemists have undertaken significant efforts toward the construction of tube-like complexes through metal-ligand coordination.38 1 Examples of silver(I) tubular complexes obtained via assembly reactions of predesigned organic ligands with silver salts are described here.42-44... [Pg.337]

Second, these grids make the regular structure like domain in fact. Here domains are the regions with different electron density. The existence of domain electron structure will contribute to the receptivity of the nanotubes and due to domain structure one may hope to find out the effects of a memory in the electron subsystem of nanotubes. One should to note that the similar domains can play the determining role (due to Coulomb interaction of electrons) in physical properties of as nanotube ropes and multi wall carbon nanotubes. [Pg.479]


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