World Record: Four-Centimeter-Long Carbon Nanotube 87
colonist writes "University of California scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory and chemists from Duke University have recently grown a four-centimeter-long, single-wall carbon nanotube (SWNT): a new world record. Previous SWNTs were a few millimeters long. Yuntian Zhu and his colleagues used a process called 'catalytic chemical vapor deposition' from ethanol (alcohol) vapor. From their abstract: 'Our results suggest the possibility of growing SWNTs continuously without any apparent length limitation.' Zhu: 'although this discovery is really only a beginning, the continued development of longer length carbon nanotubes could result in nearly endless applications. Actually, the potential uses for long carbon nanotubes are probably limited only by our imagination.'"
Next stop... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Next stop... (Score:5, Funny)
Love in an elevator..... (Score:5, Funny)
Heh heh heh heh....
Re:Next stop... (Score:3, Funny)
You going to be a very old person (Score:4, Interesting)
Growth rate 11x10^-6 m/s
elapsed time = 38,785,000 / 11x10^-6 = 3.526x10^12 s ~= 112,113 Years.
It going to be a long time till we have a swnt all the way at this rate.
PS yes I know that we don't have to have a single tube all the way there. We are going to have to ramp up the growth rate considerably though.
Re:You going to be a very old person (Score:2)
if so, we could start 112 procceses, and get there in one year.
Re:You going to be a very old person (Score:2)
That was a comma in his number... 112 would get us there in 1000 years. :)
Doug
Re:You going to be a very old person (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, by your math, we'd need at least a dozen and a half processesseseseseses -- processi? Processions?
Re:You going to be a very old person (Score:2)
Re:You going to be a very old person (Score:1)
If he had waited 18 months, he could have made it 3.
Re:You going to be a very old person (Score:2)
In 112,113 years we probably won't need space elevators.
Re:You going to be a very old person (Score:2)
Re:You going to be a very old person (Score:2)
that would imply that either growing one 4cm long swcnt in time x would magically allow the growth rate to double during every subsequent time interval or that each 4cm swcnt would magically spawn 2 or more during the next time interval (they are not living things).
Re:You going to be a very old person (Score:2)
How would you work with these things? (Score:2)
Am I wrong or would this stuff not require some seriously bizarre handling?
Re:Next stop... (Score:1)
Re:Next stop... (Score:2)
Re:Next stop... (Score:1)
Re:Next stop... (Score:2)
Re:Next stop... (Score:1)
There's probably some solution I haven't though of, but I don't think it's a trivial problem.
they should read the spam I get (Score:5, Funny)
Wonderous stuff, if only to know that the most brilliant uses for this haven't been thought of yet.
Re:they should read the spam I get (Score:3, Funny)
Re:they should read the spam I get (Score:3, Funny)
Well, you did say you wanted an elevator.
(Still a) Way to go. (Score:2, Insightful)
11 micrometres a second!
Unless I've flubbed my math, that's over 4 days to grow the short length - not saying that's not a damned good thing, as we _need_ material if we're to get Out cheaply, but production speed is almost as important as strand length.
Negativity aside (sorry, it's my nature); good work guys, keep on growing/going.
Re:(Still a) Way to go. (Score:2)
10 micrometers is 1/100th of a centimeter, so that would be 400 seconds or 6:40 minutes.
Re:(Still a) Way to go. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:(Still a) Way to go. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:(Still a) Way to go. (Score:2)
Re:(Still a) Way to go. (Score:3, Informative)
-
Re:(Still a) Way to go. (Score:2)
That's a very interesting way to think about it. Of course a research lab does take up much more space than a single cotton plant, and a single cotton plant makes more than one fiber, but still...
Re:(Still a) Way to go. (Score:2, Interesting)
Google reckons 11 micrometres is 0.0011 cm.
Keeping everything in centimetres so I don't screw up again, it's 4/0.0011, or 3636 seconds, or about an hour.
So, my plan of having a nice fat satellite in orbit growing the stuff seems a bit scuppered still.
"Production Speed" (Score:3, Interesting)
yeah. used to take them whole weeks to make a car, once upon a time. something about 'industrialization' changed all that, though
Re:"Production Speed" (Score:1)
If that's possible then, sure, massively parallel production is the way to go, but if this stuff's non-spinnable we've got to start making long strands fast, and start planning _now_.
Re:"Production Speed" (Score:1)
Liftport are aiming for 2018, complete with comedy countdown timer.
Not planning on holding my breath until proof-of-concept though...
the potential uses (Score:2, Funny)
If it can't be used as a medium for pornography, it's not a proper invention!
the first animated gifs I ever saw was porn
the first avi I ever saw was porn
the first mpeg movie I ever saw was porn
the first DivX movie I saw was porn
unzips flies waiting for the nanotube in the post
I hope it says more about porn than it says about me
Nope ... (Score:2)
Nope. Sadly, I'm afraid it's all you in this case. That happened as soon as you indicated you were about to touch yourself over a nanotube.
shudders =)
Re:the potential uses (Score:4, Funny)
I know size isn't supposed to matter, but....
exactly what are you going to put in that nanotube?
A nanotubesnake?
Mmm, monofilament... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Metallic carbon? (Score:1)
In addition to uses in lightweight, high-strength applications, these new long metallic nanotubes also will enable...
Since when is Carbon metallic?
Re:Metallic carbon? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Metallic carbon? (Score:1, Informative)
The reason why metals are the way they are is because they have large numbers of free electrons in their matrix. Nanotubes are basically just graphite rolled up into a tube, and so they have an electronic structure which is more similar to metals than, say, diamon
Re:Metallic carbon? (Score:2)
Re:Metallic carbon? (Score:3, Insightful)
Hype (Score:1, Insightful)
And so begins the hype machine to ramp up. Don't get me wrong nanotubes have some neat applications but there is quite a gap from that to uses "limited only by our imagination".
Remember only you can stop scientific hype.
Re:Hype (Score:2, Insightful)
I'll bet it becomes as important a material as doped silicon.
Re:Hype (Score:2)
It's ironic that you act as if doped Si is not used in modern aircraft, when in fact it most certainly is - just not structurally. Those cockpits are chock full of hi-tech integrated circuits, which makes air travel both safer AND cheaper. Carbon nanotubes are not only a potential replacement / upgrade for many of those uses for doped Si, it opens up new possibilities for structural improvements in airframes as well. In fact...
Oh, who am I kidding? You're an uninformed tr
Re:Hype (Score:1)
200 meter carbon nanotube fibers also out (Score:5, Interesting)
100-200 meters, that's a length you can do useful stuff. One weird thing is, they weave it in with ordinary cloth to make supercapacitors in clothing (for built-in antenna,s tiny batteries, et cetera). The field is called 'electronic textiles'!
Re:200 meter carbon nanotube fibers also out (Score:3, Informative)
I was under the impression that this earlier UT "long nanotube" was actually made by braiding smaller nanotubes together into a larger "strand". The difference here is that the 4cm world record is for a single tube, no braiding things together.
Re:200 meter carbon nanotube fibers also out (Score:2)
It's made up of single-walled carbon nanotubes, but it's a composite - it's constructed from multitudes of individual nanotubes. Or at least, so the sentence suggests...
Technology is improving every day (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Technology is improving every day (Score:2)
The Man in the White Suit (Score:1)
SIDNEY [Alex Guinness to Joan Greenwood]: Do you know what a long chain molecule [imdb.com] is ?....
Re:The Man in the White Suit (Score:1)
I'm guessing that since CNT's are electrically conductive, they apparently have an outer electron cloud that facilitates electron motion almost as if they were free electrons (like in metal or something).
Re:The Man in the White Suit (Score:1)
Wouldn't wearing a suit made of these fibers turn someone into a walking lightning rod? It sounds like a Darwin award just waiting to happen.
One use for Carbon Nanotubes: LUNG CANCER (Score:4, Interesting)
One thing that concerns me with nanotechnology is that the creation of all kinds of weird molecules that nature has no time to adapt to may leave us with some remarkably odd (and possibly pervasive) toxicity problems.
What if CNT's get widely adopted into clothing, tupperware, etc, and then 30 years down the line we find that the little fibers that inevitably break off when you handle such material get lodged in the lungs and induce cancer (like asbestos and other kinds of fibers do)?
I've heard of all kinds of interesting possible applications of CNT's (super strong fabrics and cables, conductive fabrics, electro-kinetic fabrics (generates electricity for your ipod just from you moving around)). But is anyone looking seriously into governing and exploring toxicity issues with these new synthetic molecules and materials?
bif
Re:One use for Carbon Nanotubes: LUNG CANCER (Score:3, Informative)
-AD
Re:One use for Carbon Nanotubes: LUNG CANCER (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, and chornic smoke inhalation leads to lung cancer. So I take it that you were agreeing with original poster.
.
-shpoffo
Re:One use for Carbon Nanotubes: LUNG CANCER (Score:1, Insightful)
no not just cigarette smoke - any smoke
Re:One use for Carbon Nanotubes: LUNG CANCER (Score:2)
The use of Fluorescently labeled nanoparticles to determine the effect of particle size on translocation from the lung [mattek.com]
NanoParticles Shown to Cause Brain Damage [organicconsumers.org]
etc. etc. etc.
Re:One use for Carbon Nanotubes: LUNG CANCER (Score:1)
I believe that asbestos is highly inert and yet it is a known carcinogen banned from public use. There are other chemically inert fibrous materials that are known to cause lung cancer as well.
Anyway, check out several of the articles above which already indicate that buckies are dangerous to cellular function... buckies are "just carbon" too and their structure is very similar to that of CNT's
The problem here is that they are microscopic in size,
Space Elevator!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Can we build it yet? huh? huh? Can we can we can we?
Can you tell I'm really excited by this?
Time to go enter a ribbon climbing robot contest!
Re:Space Elevator!! (Score:3, Funny)
Like a genuine,
Bona fide,
Electrified,
Six-car
Space-Elevator!
Wh a t'd I say?
Ned Flanders: Space-Elevator!
Lyle Lanley: What's it called?
Patty+Selma: Space-Elevator!
Lyle Lanley: That's right! Space-Elevator!
Miss Hoover: I hear those things are awfully loud...
Lyle Lanley: It climbs as softly as a cloud.
Apu: Is there a chance the cable could break?
Lyle Lanley: Not on your life, my Hindu friend.
Barney: What about us brain-dead slobs?
Lyle Lanley: You'll be given cushy
Re:Space Elevator!! (Score:2)
Space-Elevator sounds dorky it'll never catch on we need a monorail like name!
Any ideas?
Re:Space Elevator!! (Score:1)
Why is this a record? (Score:2)
Why is this a record? According to Super Fibers: Nanotubes make tough threads [phschool.com], there have allready been 100 meter threads grown.
From the article:
By modifying a process developed by French researchers (SN: 12/16/00, p. 398), Baughman's team spins fibers made of carbon nanotubes and polyvinyl alcohol, a common industrial polymer. In the June 12 Nature, Baughman and his colleagues describe the finished threads, which are the width of a human hair and 100 to 200 meters long.
Re:Why is this a record? (Score:3, Informative)
Baughman's team spins fibers made of carbon nanotubes and.
The greater the length of nanotube, the less epoxy needed to hold the woven elevator ribbon together. Since the epoxy weighs a lot more than the nanotube, this is a good thing and reduces load on the ribbon from its own weight
Re:Why is this a record? (Score:1)
Just in case you ever check your old posts for replys...
Thank you. I missed that entirely.
In other words.... (Score:3, Funny)
So in other words, they're having a few beers in the lab one night, and one of them spills it into the testing appratus.
Scientist #1:"Dude? What have you done?"
Scientist #2: (Frenzied running in circles) "Oh my God!! Oh my God!! Oh my God!! Oh my God!! Oh my God!! Oh my God!! Oh my God!!"
Scientist #3: "Uhhh, guys, something's happening..."
Carbon nanotube fiber to replace carbon fiber? (Score:1)
Anyone else remember this? (Score:2, Interesting)
The quote I'm remembering was that, if they could reliably build single-walled nanotubes at least an inch long and use that composite design, the tensile strength would be enough to build the elevator.
4 cm / 2.54 = orbit?
How do you destroy a carbon nanotube? (Score:2, Interesting)
Okay, so we can make them. Say that nanotubes become commonplace. Say that somebody discoveres they cause brain disease in fish and lung cancer.
How would we clean up the mess? Do they combust? Will they eventually oxidize to CO2? How do you destroy a carbon nanotube? Or will they just go through the food cycle causing damage for millenia?
how about using it as super-mega cutter (Score:1)
Would make one-hell of a cutting device, many different uses come to mind, but might be a bit dangerous to handle.
Or am I completely off track?
shigawire (Score:2)