Carbon Nanotube Semiconductor Possibilites 14
hin writes "At the recent ISSCC in San Francisco, a review paper was presented at the conference in regard
to the feasibility of carbon nanotubes for use
in semiconductors.
" As most people know, put nano in something, and you'll get my attention-but these engineers are talking about using carbon nanotubes that would be hexagonally shaped (thoughts of benzene rings run through my head), and can be as small as 1.4 nm, and as long as 10 microns. There are still a significant number of hurdles to jump before having this even practical, but as the artile states: "It's becoming an experimental field of research rather than a
theoretical one."
Make your own [Nanotubes for Sale!!!] (Score:1)
The catalyst is made by impregnating a carrier (e.g silica) with a Ni salt. Heat it up and send a mix of N2/He/Ar + CO/CH4 over it.
Maybe a bit dangerous to di it at home, but you could ask your chemistry teacher
Bas
Overly optimistic (Score:1)
And we have no way to know whether they are metallic or semiconducting without hooking up traditional wires to them.
And we have no way to arrange them as we like on a surface.
And if we did, we couldn't make devices out of them, since we have no way to make decent electrical contacts between them.
It is not that I don't respect the people who are working on tubes. I work with a bunch of them, and they are very clever people. But they would be the first to tell you that they aren't likely to be able to make computers out of these things.
Making buckyballs (Score:1)
Presumably you do get some miniscule amount in any sooty flame, but it's really not measurable. A little hydrogen in the environment goes a long to impede fullerene formation. There are measurable amounts in some types of lightening-struck rock, though. The only natural occurance of stuff.
maybe the next great thing, maybe... (Score:2)
First, you have to be able mass produce these tings. In the paper I saw, they said that they were using atomic force microscopes to move these one at a time. We're not talkin' pentiums here (thank god).
Second, the electrical properties they displayed are not very desirable. The contacts between these tubes and metal has about 500 kOhms resistance, that's a lot. This will seriously slow anything down on these things. Now, they said that they think they can reduce that by a factor of 10, but wait untill they do.
The traditional devices they showed (tubeFET) didn't really have a usefull aplication. The output resistance was very low (this time you want to be able increase it), therefore the gain was low. Digital as well as analog curcuits using these will not work (the gain is actually 1).
One of the more interesting devices has not even been built yet, that is the single electron transistor (SET). Theswe look nice because they are small and fast, but we have yet to see then. An other issue with these is that we may not be able to build good analog cuircits with these. If you think we're lining in a digital world, then how does the 24 bit music on your super-hi-fi sterio get into that format? You need an analog to digital converter. For 24 bit, you need to be able to resolve signals to 1 part in 16 million. with 1 electron, hmmmm, that's tough. But, there may bw architectures that can do this, maybe oversampled ADCs will be able to use these. The thing is, this has yet to be seen. We may have a future where analog circuts are still on silicon, and digital circuits are in 0.01 um, 5000 GHz nanotubes. I guess it wouldn't be so bad.
That said, I really like carbon nanotubes. I think that they may be the next great thing. They certainly have more promise than any of the other new technologis to come along since silicon. I just think that there are a lot of hurdles to get over first. It's tempting to get excited at the first sign of hope (I know, I've done it several times), just realize that this could still fall apart like a Chinese motorcycle.
Matt
More about buckytubes and buckyballs (Score:2)
Actually, X ray diffraction studies show that the bond lengths are all identical, so it's really more like each is a 1.666-order bond. This phenomenon, called resonance, also appears in benzene. It is thought to be a quantum superposition of all the possible different ways of arranging the double bonds. (What we call a double bond is actually a superposition of a sigma orbital and a pi orbital.)
The pi orbitals in a sheet of graphite or buckytube all blend together, and depending on the tube's chirality (how the hexagons are oriented relative to the cylindrical axis), this can either allow electrons to move up and down the tube very easily, or it can give semiconductor-like behavior. So a trick to building these kinds of circuits is to find joints that will allow you to join tubes of differing chirality.
Fullerenes are generally quite stable molecules, so it's not too surprising that they describe difficulty in getting current into and out of the buckytube. It turns out that it's not too hard to stick little molecular pieces onto the sides of buckytubes. Al Globus at NASA [nasa.gov] has done a lot of thinking and simulations relating to applications of nanotubes, including adding teeth to make them function as gears. [nasa.gov]
Possibly the best source of information on fullerenes is Richard Smalley's Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology [rice.edu] at Rice University. Smalley received a Nobel prize for the discovery of fullerenes. The CNST has an interesting-looking PDF document [rice.edu] describing the Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory, and discussing the science of fullerenes and some of the potential applications. Fun stuff.
After the TubeFET (Score:1)
Tiny researchers (Score:1)
as far as schools doing research in fullerenes, we are a little tiny school (3500, including grad students in the seminary) and a few of my friends spend the summer producing buckyballs.
(which just goes to show that the really cool stuff doesn't have to be done by the big boys, a nice garage can be the spawning pool for new technologies
Maybe just optimistic? (Score:1)
There are definite possibilites and strange characteristics, which we may be able to harness even if not in a traditional computing sense. Even the fact that fullerenes can display metallic, semi-metallitc, insulative, and superconductive properties, depending on impurities and construction, gives us a lot of hope that we can do something unique and wonderful with them. Perhaps the electrical contact issue can be resolved by using the tubes themselves as wires, rather than metals... I'm sure many options are being considered, discarded, re-examined, and discovered.
Though I applaud your voicing caution amid hype =)
Couldn't help but notice your email... A physicist, perhaps? Materials science? Chemist? I think cory is the EE/CS network, because my friend is also at Berkeley right now. What real options/opinions and ideas are being done right now for fullerenes?
AS
AS
Nanotubes for Sale!!! (Score:1)
http://cnst.rice.edu/tubes/
--Lenny