Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




Strengthening the glow of nanotube luminiscence

TheallIneed.com/NC&T/VU
Nanotubes also produce light with a number of interesting properties, which have led researchers to propose various optical applications. One of the most promising is to use the tiny tubes as fluorescent markers to study biological systems, a role pioneered by fluorescent proteins. But there has been one primary problem: Nanotubes have proven to be very inefficient phosphors, absorbing a thousand photons for every photon that they emit (a ratio called quantum efficiency).

Now, however, the latest research into nanotube luminescence has found that there is substantial room for increasing the efficiency of these infinitesimal light sources: The study, which is the first to measure the luminescence of single nanotubes, was published in the Nov. 4 issue of Physical Review Letters and reports that there is a surprising amount of variation between the quantum efficiencies of the 15 individual nanotubes that were examined.

"We were expecting to see individual differences of only a few percent, so we were very surprised to find that some nanotubes are a 1,000 percent more efficient than others," says Tobias Hertel, associate professor of physics at Vanderbilt University, who conducted the study with two German research groups.

Nanotubes are members of the fullerene family along with buckyballs, carbon molecules shaped like soccer balls. Nanotubes, which are also called buckytubes, are seamless cylinders made of carbon atoms and capped on at least one end with a buckyball hemisphere. Nanotubes come in two basic forms: single-walled and multi-walled, which have two or more concentric shells. Slight differences in the geometric arrangement of carbon atoms produces nanotubes with different electrical properties, either metallic or semiconductor. Semiconducting nanotubes are the variety that produces light.

Tobias Hertel in the lab. (Photo: Vanderbilt University)
Since nanotubes were discovered in 1991, scientists have determined that they are relatively easy to make and have developed several methods for doing so.

The original process that was used is called the arc-discharge technique. Large amounts of current are passed through two graphite rods in a container filled with high-pressure helium gas. As the rods are brought together, an electrical arc is formed and the carbon in the smaller rod is transformed into a tubular structure filled with nanotubes. This produces a mixture of different types of nanotubes, including single-walled and multiple walled, semiconductor and metallic varieties in the form of black, sooty powder.

A more recent process uses a laser to vaporize carbon by scanning repeated across a flat slab made from a mixture of graphite and metal. This approach is noted for its ability to make a large proportion of single-walled tubes. In addition, a chemical vapor deposition process has been developed that is most suitable for producing nanotubes in commercial quantities.

"Our analysis pinpoints structural defects as the source for most of the energy drain that reduces nanotubes' quantum efficiency as a light source. It should be possible to plug these energy sinks and improve their overall efficiency by a factor of five or so by improvements in the synthesis processes," Hertel says.

Although he doesn't know exactly what these improvements will be, Hertel is confident that they will happen. Improving nanotube synthesis is a big business. "There are hundreds of research groups around the world who are working full time to improve nanotube synthesis," he reports. As a result, improvements in the various synthesis processes are reported regularly.

Even if improving the nanotube's quantum efficiency proves unexpectedly difficult, there are likely to be work-arounds. For example, another way to brighten nanotubes is to simply make them longer, the physicist points out.

Other research groups are already experimenting with the use of nanotubes as a replacement for fluorescent proteins in the study of biological systems. In this application, they are competing with another nanotechnology called quantum dots, which are tiny fluorescent beads often made of cadmium selenide. According to Hertel, nanotubes have several inherent advantages over quantum dots for this application. Nanotubes are not known to be toxic to living cells, unlike the cadmium found in quantum dots. They produce a narrower, more precise beam of light, which makes them easier to detect. Finally, they are more stable and continue producing light long after quantum dots have faded.

About the Author
©2005 All rights reserved

More articles
Quantum computers
Wireless technology
Preventing friendly fire
Digital camera technology
Non invasive surgery techniques
Chips manufacture
Millenium Bridge movements
Artificial ear
Intelligent buildings secutity system
Robotic muscle
Hydrogen economy
Suspension systems
Computer learning
Nanotubes properties
Energy efficiency
Molecular electronics
Silicon properties
Nanotechnologies
Medical engineering
Environmental psychology
Quotes
Good Night, Good night! Parting is such sweet sorrow, that I shall say good night till it be morrow.-William Shakespeare

Giving is the highest expression of our power. - Vivian Greene

Go down to the machine room and tell them to empty the bit bucket,and FAST, before this baby overflows. -- Adrian Colley


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Active 2008 Hurricane Season Predictions Reinforce the Need to Prepare
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Climate Prediction Center announced today that projected climate conditions point to a near normal or above normal hurricane season in the Atlantic Basin this year.
What is your favorite new tech item?
iPod
Plasma screen
Game console
Videophone
Other
 
Things to ponder
Could it be that all those trick-or-treaters wearing sheets aren't going as ghosts but as mattresses?

Did you know...
The word "shrimp" comes from "shrimpe" meaning "pygmy".

Quote of the day
Now we sit through Shakespeare in order to recognize the quotations.
Orson Welles

Featured article
Highest and Best Use Analysis
Highest and best use analysis can assist an owner in maximizing return. Highest and best use analysis can be performed for acreage, site development, and for improved properties. Research and planning can substantially increase investment returns.

 
© 2002 - 2007 Lexur