(Press-News.org) The very idea of fibers made of carbon nanotubes is neat, but Rice University scientists are making them neat -- literally.
The single-walled carbon nanotubes in new fibers created at Rice line up like a fistful of uncooked spaghetti through a process designed by chemist Angel Martí and his colleagues.
The tricky bit, according to Martí, whose lab reported its results this month in the journal ACS Nano, is keeping the densely packed nanotubes apart before they're drawn together into a fiber.
Left to their own devices, carbon nanotubes form clumps that are perfectly wrong for turning into the kind of strong, conductive fibers needed for projects ranging from nanoscale electronics to macro-scale power grids.
Earlier research at Rice by chemist and chemical engineer Matteo Pasquali, a co-author on the new paper, used an acid dissolution process to keep the nanotubes separated until they could be spun into fibers. Now Martí, Pasquali and their colleagues are producing "neat" fibers with the same mechanical process, but they're starting with a different kind of feedstock.
"Matteo's group used chlorosulfonic acid to protonate the surface of the nanotubes," Martí said. "That would give them a positively charged surface so they would repel each other in solution. The technique we use is exactly the opposite."
A process revealed last year by Martí and lead authors Chengmin Jiang, a graduate student, and Avishek Saha, a Rice alumnus, starts with negatively charging carbon nanotubes by infusing them with potassium, a metal, and turning them into a kind of salt known as a polyelectrolyte. They then employ cage-like crown ethers to capture the potassium ions that would otherwise dampen the nanotubes' ability to repel one another.
Put enough nanotubes into such a solution and they're caught between the repellant forces and an inability to move in a crowded environment, Martí said. They're forced to align -- a defining property of liquid crystals -- and this makes them more manageable.
The tubes are ultimately forced together into fibers when they are extruded through the tip of a needle. At that point, the strong van der Waals force takes over and tightly binds the nanotubes together, Martí said.
But to make macroscopic materials, the Martí team needed to pack many more nanotubes into the solution than in previous experiments. "As you start increasing the concentration, the number of nanotubes in the liquid crystalline phase becomes more abundant than those in the isotropic (disordered) phase, and that's exactly what we needed," Martí said.
The researchers discovered that 40 milligrams of nanotubes per milliliter gave them a thick gel after mixing at high speed and filtering out whatever large clumps remained. "It's like a centrifuge together with a rotary drum," Martí said of the mixing gear. "It produces unconventional forces in the solution."
Feeding this dense nanotube gel through a narrow needle-like opening produced continuous fiber on the Pasquali lab's equipment. The strength and stiffness of the neat fibers also approached that of the fibers previously produced with Pasquali's acid-based process. "We didn't make any modifications to his system and it worked perfectly," Martí said.
The hair-width fibers can be woven into thicker cables, and the team is investigating ways to improve their electrical properties through doping the nanotubes with iodide. "The research is basically analogous to what Matteo does," Martí said. "We used his tools but gave the process a spin with a different preparation, so now we're the first to make neat fibers of pure carbon nanotube electrolytes. That's very cool."
Pasquali said that the spinning system worked with little need for adaptation because the setup is sealed. "The nanotube electrolyte solution could be protected from oxygen and water, which would have caused precipitation of the nanotubes," he said.
"It turns out that this is not a showstopper, because we want the nanotubes to precipitate and stick to each other as soon as they exit the sealed system through the needle. The process was not hard to control, adapt and scale up once we figured out the basic science."
INFORMATION:
Co-authors are Rice graduate student Colin Young, alumnus Daniel Paul Hashim, former visiting researcher Carolyn Ramirez and Pulickel Ajayan, the Benjamin M. and Mary Greenwood Anderson Professor in Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science and of chemistry, and chair of the Department of Materials Science and NanoEngineering.
Pasquali is chair of the Department of Chemistry and a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, of materials science and nanoengineering and of chemistry. Martí is an assistant professor of chemistry and bioengineering and of materials science and nanoengineering.
The Welch Foundation supported the research.
Read the abstract at http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/nn502552q
This news release can be found online at http://news.rice.edu/2014/09/15/rice-rolls-neat-nanotube-fibers/
Follow Rice News and Media Relations via Twitter @RiceUNews
Related Materials
Marti Group: http://amarti.web.rice.edu/Lab/Home.html
Complex Flows of Complex Fluids (Pasquali Group): https://pasquali.rice.edu
Ajayan Research Group: http://ajayan.rice.edu
Images for Download
http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/0915_FIBER-1-web.jpg
Carbon nanotubes extruded into a pure fiber are the product of an acid-free process invented at Rice University. (Credit: Martí Group/Rice University)
http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/0915_FIBER-2-web.jpg
Carbon nanotubes extruded into a pure fiber are the product of an acid-free process invented at Rice University. (Credit: Martí Group/Rice University)
http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/0915_FIBER-3-web.jpg
Rice University scientists are making carbon nanotube solutions that act as liquid crystals as a precursor to pulling them into strong, conductive fibers. (Credit: Martí Group/Rice University)
http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/0915_FIBER-4-web.jpg
Rice University researchers Chengmin Jiang, left, and Angel Martí hold a fiber made of pure carbon nanotubes. (Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)
http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/0915_FIBER-5-web.jpg
A "neat" carbon nanotube fiber made at Rice University consists of highly aligned nanotubes made with an acid-free process. (Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)
http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/0915_FIBER-6-web.jpg
A "neat" carbon nanotube fiber made at Rice University consists of highly aligned nanotubes made with an acid-free process. (Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)
Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation's top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of Architecture, Business, Continuing Studies, Engineering, Humanities, Music, Natural Sciences and Social Sciences and is home to the Baker Institute for Public Policy. With 3,920 undergraduates and 2,567 graduate students, Rice's undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is just over 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice is highly ranked for best quality of life by the Princeton Review and for best value among private universities by Kiplinger's Personal Finance.
Rice rolls 'neat' nanotube fibers
Rice University researchers' acid-free approach leads to strong conductive carbon threads
2014-09-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
1 in 5 men reports violence toward intimate partners
2014-09-15
ANN ARBOR, Mich. —One in five men in the U.S. reports violence towards their spouse or significant other, says a new nationally-representative study by the University of Michigan.
The analysis also found that male aggression toward a partner is associated with warning signs that could come up during routine health care visits, including irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and insomnia, in addition to better known risks like substance abuse and a history of either experiencing or witnessing violence as a child.
The findings appear in the Journal of the American Board of Family ...
UChicago study finds young women involve parent in abortion when anticipating support
2014-09-15
CHICAGO, IL—When an adolescent wants to terminate a pregnancy, how does she decide whether to talk to a parent? A recent study from the Section of Family Planning and Contraceptive Research at the University of Chicago found that pregnant teens will turn to parents and adults who are engaged in their lives and who will offer support, regardless of her pregnancy decision. Young women will avoid talking with parents who are less involved or may try to prevent them from seeking care.
The study, published online ahead of print in the American Journal of Public Health, explored ...
Genetics reveals patients susceptible to drug-induced pancreatitis
2014-09-15
Doctors have discovered that patients with a particular genetic variation are four times more likely to develop pancreatitis if they are prescribed a widely used group of drugs.
Clinicians at the Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Exeter Medical School have discovered that 17 per cent of patients who have two copies of a particular genetic marker are likely to go on to develop pancreatitis if they are prescribed thiopurine drugs. The drugs, which include azathioprine and mercaptopurine, are some of the most effective and most commonly used ...
Scientists come closer to the industrial synthesis of a material harder than diamond
2014-09-15
Researchers from Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Technological Institute for Superhard and Novel Carbon Materials in Troitsk, MISiS, and MSU have developed anew method for the synthesis of an ultrahard material that exceeds diamond in hardness. An article recently published in the journal Carbon describes in detail a method that allows for the synthesis of ultrahard fullerite, a polymer composed of fullerenes, or spherical molecules made of carbon atoms.
In their work, the scientists note that diamond hasn't been the hardest material for some time now. Natural ...
Nurses need education on advance health care directives, reports Journal of Christian Nursing
2014-09-15
September 15, 2014 – An educational program for nurses can help address knowledge gaps related to advance health care directives (AHCDs)—thus helping to ensure that patients' wishes for care at the end of life are known and respected, reports a paper in the October/December Journal of Christian Nursing, official journal of the Nurses Christian Fellowship. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health.
Maureen Kroning, EdD, RN, of Nyack (N.Y.) College and Good Samaritan Hospital presents her hospital's experience with developing ...
Skin cancer risks higher for soldiers serving abroad
2014-09-15
Soldiers deployed to tropical and sunny climates are coming home with increased risk factors for a threat far from the battlefield: skin cancer.
In a retrospective study of about 200 veterans seen at the post-deployment clinic of the Tennessee Valley Healthcare System of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, researchers from Vanderbilt University Medical Center and the Tennessee Valley Healthcare System found that 62 percent of military personnel reported getting sunburned while deployed abroad, including cases of skin blistering. In addition, 29 percent noted a change ...
The science behind swimming
2014-09-15
At nearly 100 feet long and weighing as much as 170 tons, the blue whale is the largest creature on the planet, and by far the heaviest living thing ever seen on Earth. So there's no way it could have anything in common with the tiniest fish larvae, which measure millimeters in length and tip the scales at a fraction of a gram, right?
Not so fast, says L. Mahadevan, the Lola England de Valpine Professor of Applied Mathematics, of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and of Physics.
Using simple hydrodynamics, a team of researchers led by Mahadevan was able to show ...
Brain Development in Schizophrenia Strays from the Normal Path
2014-09-15
Philadelphia, PA, September 15, 2014 – Schizophrenia is generally considered to be a disorder of brain development and it shares many risk factors, both genetic and environmental, with other neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and intellectual disability.
The normal path for brain development is determined by the combined effects of a complex network of genes and a wide range of environmental factors.
However, longitudinal brain imaging studies in both healthy and patient populations are required in order to map the disturbances in brain structures as they emerge, ...
Sleep disorders widely undiagnosed in individuals with multiple sclerosis
2014-09-15
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) —In what may be the largest study of sleep problems among individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS), researchers at UC Davis have found that widely undiagnosed sleep disorders may be at the root of the most common and disabling symptom of the disease: fatigue.
Conducted in over 2,300 individuals in Northern California with multiple sclerosis, the large, population-based study found that, overall, more than 70 percent of participants screened positive for one or more sleep disorders.
The research highlights the importance of diagnosing the root causes ...
How evolutionary principles could help save our world
2014-09-15
The age of the Anthropocene--the scientific name given to our current geologic age--is dominated by human impacts on our environment. A warming climate. Increased resistance of pathogens and pests. A swelling population. Coping with these modern global challenges requires application of what one might call a more-ancient principle: evolution.
That's the recommendation of a diverse group of researchers, in a paper published today in the online version of the journal Science. A majority of the nine authors on the paper have received funding from the National Science Foundation ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New register opens to crown Champion Trees across the U.S.
A unified approach to health data exchange
New superconductor with hallmark of unconventional superconductivity discovered
Global HIV study finds that cardiovascular risk models underestimate for key populations
New study offers insights into how populations conform or go against the crowd
Development of a high-performance AI device utilizing ion-controlled spin wave interference in magnetic materials
WashU researchers map individual brain dynamics
Technology for oxidizing atmospheric methane won’t help the climate
US Department of Energy announces Early Career Research Program for FY 2025
PECASE winners: 3 UVA engineering professors receive presidential early career awards
‘Turn on the lights’: DAVD display helps navy divers navigate undersea conditions
MSU researcher’s breakthrough model sheds light on solar storms and space weather
Nebraska psychology professor recognized with Presidential Early Career Award
New data shows how ‘rage giving’ boosted immigrant-serving nonprofits during the first Trump Administration
Unique characteristics of a rare liver cancer identified as clinical trial of new treatment begins
From lab to field: CABBI pipeline delivers oil-rich sorghum
Stem cell therapy jumpstarts brain recovery after stroke
Polymer editing can upcycle waste into higher-performance plastics
Research on past hurricanes aims to reduce future risk
UT Health San Antonio, UTSA researchers receive prestigious 2025 Hill Prizes for medicine and technology
Panorama of our nearest galactic neighbor unveils hundreds of millions of stars
A chain reaction: HIV vaccines can lead to antibodies against antibodies
Bacteria in polymers form cables that grow into living gels
Rotavirus protein NSP4 manipulates gastrointestinal disease severity
‘Ding-dong:’ A study finds specific neurons with an immune doorbell
A major advance in biology combines DNA and RNA and could revolutionize cancer treatments
Neutrophil elastase as a predictor of delivery in pregnant women with preterm labor
NIH to lead implementation of National Plan to End Parkinson’s Act
Growth of private equity and hospital consolidation in primary care and price implications
Online advertising of compounded glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists
[Press-News.org] Rice rolls 'neat' nanotube fibersRice University researchers' acid-free approach leads to strong conductive carbon threads