TCI uses cookies to personalize and improve your user experience. By continuing on our website, you accept the use of cookies. You can change or update your cookiesettings at any time.
Maintenance Notice (5:15 AM - 4:55 PM May 24, 2025): This website is scheduled to be unavailable due to maintenance. We appreciate your patience and understanding.
A carbon nanotube (CNT) has a cylindrical structure with a nanoscale diameter that is like a rolled graphene sheet. Iijima first observed a CNT in 1991.1) A CNT consists of only sp2 carbons similar to fullerenes. There are diverse CNTs on the basis of their length, diameter of the nanotube, state of chirality, and number of the layer. The variety of these structures provides various band structures and metallic and semiconducting properties.2,3) A normal synthetic procedure gives a mixture of semiconducting CNTs in 2/3 and metallic CNTs in 1/3, because rolling a carbon sheet occurs randomly. Since we need to obtain the semiconducting CNT in pure form in order to utilize the semiconductivity, improved synthetic procedure and efficient purification of CNT are further required.4-7) Moreover, CNTs have high physical durability, high electrical and thermal conductivity, and are light and flexible. On the basis of such excellent characteristics, CNTs are expected to be field-effect transistor (FET) materials, nanoscale wire materials, electron emission sources, optical communication switches, chemical sensors, high strength composites, and thermal devices.8-10) CNTs can enclose nanoscale molecules and atoms in the internal space, because of the cylindrical structure. For instance, there is a fullerene-enclosed CNT, the so-called ‘peapod’.11) In addition, CNTs can enclose metal, water, and molecular oxygen. Properties of the enclosed water in the CNT are different from those of bulk water.12,13) An organic dye (eg. squarylium) can be easily enclosed within the internal space of CNTs in solution. In this case, the enclosed squarylium dye absorbs light and then an energy transfer (sensitization) to the outer CNT occurs.14) Hydrogen storage using CNTs is expected to be used in the development of a fuel cell.15)
Your session will timeout in 10 minutes. You will be redirected to the HOME page after session timeout. Please click the button to continue session from the same page. minute. You will be redirected to the HOME page after session timeout. Please click the button to continue session from the same page.