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RESEARCH
Science
Chemistry
New chemical process can separate,
manipulate carbon nanotubes
Jim Kloeppel,
Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
9/11/03
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
All single-walled-carbon nanotubes are not created equal. Instead, they
form diverse assortments that vary markedly in features such as size
and electrical properties. Although carbon nanotubes have been proposed
for myriad applications – from miniature motors and chemical sensors
to molecule-size electronic circuits – their actual uses have
been severely limited by an inability to isolate and manipulate nanotubes
having different characteristics.
Now, researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and
at Rice University have discovered a way to chemically select and separate
carbon nanotubes based on their electronic structure. The new process
also represents a fundamental shift in the way scientists think about
the chemistry of nanotubes.
“Separating nanotubes based on their electronic properties has
been a long sought goal of the carbon nanotube community,” said
Michael Strano, a professor of chemical
and biomolecular engineering at Illinois and lead author of a paper
to appear in the Sept. 12 issue of the journal Science. “In addition
to presenting a broad class of materials, nanotubes tend to stick together
and form bundles, making it even more difficult to separate and use
them.”
Several years ago, Strano and co-workers at Rice developed a technique
for breaking up the bundles and dispersing the nanotubes in water laced
with a surfactant. In the present work, Strano and his graduate students,
Monica Usrey and Paul Barone, teamed up with organic chemist James Tour
at Rice and his postdoctoral researcher Christopher Dyke to apply reaction
chemistry to the surfaces of nanotubes in order to select metallic tubes
over the semiconductors.
To control nanotube chemistry, Strano and his colleagues add water-soluble
diazonium salts to nanotubes suspended in an aqueous solution. The diazonium
reagent extracts an electric charge and chemically bonds to the nanotubes
under certain controlled conditions.
By adding a functional group to the end of the reagent, the researchers
can create a “handle” that they can then use to selectively
manipulate the nanotubes. There are different techniques for pulling
on the handles, including chemical deposition and capillary electrophoresis.
“The electronic properties of nanotubes are determined by their
structure, so we have a way of grabbing hold of different nanotubes
by utilizing the differences in this electronic structure,” Strano
said. “Because metals give up an electron faster than semiconductors,
the diazonium reagent can be used to separate metallic nanotubes from
semiconducting nanotubes.”
The chemistry is reversible, Strano said. After manipulating the nanotubes,
the scientists can remove the chemical handles by applying heat. The
thermal treatment also restores the pristine electronic structure of
the nanotubes.
“Until now, the consensus has been that the chemistry of a nanotube
is dependent only on its diameter, with smaller tubes being less stable
and more reactive,” Strano said. “But that’s clearly
not the case here. Our reaction pathways are based on the electronic
properties of the nanotube, not strictly on its geometric structure.
This represents a new paradigm in the solution phase chemistry of carbon
nanotubes.”
The National Science Foundation funded the work.
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