CHALK UP ANOTHER COUP FOR CARBON NANOTUBES:
PENN SCIENTISTS FIND THE TINY CYLINDERS OF PURE CARBON MAY
TOP ALL OTHER KNOWN MATERIALS IN HEAT CONDUCTION
PHILADELPHIA - New research from the University of Pennsylvania
indicates that carbon nanotubes, filaments of pure carbon
less than one ten-thousandth the width of a human hair, may
be the best heat-conducting material man has ever known. The
findings suggest that these exotic strands, already heralded
for their unparalleled strength and unique ability to adopt
the electrical properties of either semiconductors or perfect
metals, may someday also find applications as miniature heat
conduits in a host of devices and materials.
A Penn team led by materials scientist John E. Fischer, Ph.D.,
and physicist Alan T. Johnson, Ph.D., offers these first details
on carbon nanotubes' thermal properties in a paper appearing
in the Sept. 8 issue of the journal Science.
For some time, scientists have been intrigued by carbon nanotubes,
pure carbon cylinders with walls just one atom thick. First
created a decade ago by zapping graphite with lasers, the
structures have become one of the marvels of the nanotechnology
world -- 100 times as strong as steel and capable of far greater
electrical conductivity than other carbon-based materials.
Researchers have envisioned the miniature strands bulking
up brittle plastics and conducting current in ever-smaller
electrical circuits, among dozens of other possibilities.
Carbon nanotubes' newfound ability to conduct heat suggests
applications far beyond those that call on their strength
and electrical conductivity, said Dr. Johnson, an assistant
professor of physics at Penn. As computing power has skyrocketed,
the infinitesimal heat generated by each circuit on a microchip
has proved a headache for computer designers and manufacturers,
who have few ways to dissipate the considerable heat that
results from millions of circuits operating in tandem. Next-generation
computer designs might circumvent this problem with judiciously
placed carbon nanotubes to direct heat away from sensitive
circuitry.
Similarly, carbon nanotubes used as heat sinks in electric
motors could allow for the introduction of plastic parts that
might otherwise melt under the motors' intense heat. The tiny
structures could also be embedded in materials regularly called
upon to withstand extreme heat, such as those that form the
exterior panels of airplanes and rockets.
Heat energy in nanotubes is carried by sound waves; in materials
that are optimal conductors of heat, these waves move very
rapidly in an essentially one-dimensional direction. Drs.
Fischer and Johnson found that sound waves bearing thermal
energy travel straight down individual carbon nanotubes at
roughly 10,000 meters per second, behavior consistent with
superior thermal conductivity. But they also unexpectedly
determined that even when carbon nanotubes are bundled together
- like individual filaments welded together into the giant
cables that support suspension bridges - the bonds between
the individual nanotubes remain so weak that heat essentially
doesn't transcend them.
"Scientists had predicted that two-dimensional or three-dimensional
arrays of carbon nanotubes would permit the sound waves carrying
heat to scatter in all directions, greatly reducing thermal
conductivity," said Dr. Fischer, a professor of materials
science and engineering in Penn's Laboratory for Research
on the Structure of Matter. "Our experiments showed that
even within bundles of nanotubes, sound waves remain remarkably
one-dimensional."
"The sound waves don't fan out and dissipate because
the bonds between nanotubes in a bundle are so weak,"
Dr. Johnson said. "In terms of bonding strength, you
can think of nanotubes in a bundle almost like dried spaghetti
sliding freely back and forth when you shake its box."
Ironically, the same weak linkages that make carbon nanotubes
superior for heat conductance could deflate scientists' earlier
expectation that bundles of them would provide un-rivaled
mechanical strength. While the individual nanotubes are extremely
strong, the weak bonding Drs. Fischer and Johnson observed
between nanotubes would need to be overcome to translate this
strength to a thicker structure.
Drs. Fischer and Johnson were joined in the research by James
Hone, a former Penn postdoctoral researcher now at the California
Institute of Technology; Bertram Batlogg of Lucent Technologies;
and Zdenek Benes, a Penn graduate student. The work was sponsored
by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department
of Energy.
|