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A new carbon nanotool springs to life.


Multiwall nanotubes contain several concentric cylinders of carbon atoms, one packed inside another, like nesting wooden dolls. Now, physicists have managed to peel back the outermost out·er·most  
adj.
Most distant from the center or inside; outmost.


outermost
Adjective

furthest from the centre or middle

Adj. 1.
 layers on one end of such a structure just 100 atoms or so wide and pull out the inner cylinders.

The finding suggests that these nanotubes could, one day, be the tiny bearings and springs of nanosize machines.

John Cumings, a physics graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley is a public research university located in Berkeley, California, United States. Commonly referred to as UC Berkeley, Berkeley and Cal , performed the experiments by incorporating a scanning tunneling microscope scanning tunneling microscope, device for studying and imaging individual atoms on the surfaces of materials. The instrument was invented in the early 1980s by Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer, who were awarded the 1986 Nobel prize in physics for their work.  (STM (Scanning Tunneling Microscope) A microscope that can image down to the atomic level. An STM uses a piezoelectric tube with a tiny sharp tip at the end that is moved within nanometers of the object being sampled. ) into a transmission electron microscope. While the electron microscope took high-resolution pictures, he used a tough nanotube A carbon molecule that resembles a cylinder made out of chicken wire one to two nanometers in diameter by any number of millimeters in length. Accidentally discovered by a Japanese researcher at NEC in 1990 while making Buckyballs, they have potential use in many applications.  attached to the STM's probe to manipulate a multiwall nanotube fixed to the microscope stage.

After removing the outer few layers of atoms from the fixed tube's end, Cumings found he could slide its inner cylinders--perhaps four or so--in and out of the outer shell.

During one test, the connection between Cumings' probe and the telescoping nanotube broke. To his surprise, the extended layers snapped back into their sheath, as a nearly frictionless spring would. Cumings and Alex Zettl, also at Berkeley, described the research in the July 28 SCIENCE.

"It's interesting because they're directly imaging the structure of the nanotube during a dynamic process," comments Richard Superfine superfine

a class of merino sheep with wool finer than that of fine-wool. Usual limit is wool of 18.5 microns or less fiber diameter.
 of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is a public, coeducational, research university located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States. Also known as The University of North Carolina, Carolina, North Carolina, or simply UNC .

Cumings and Zettl suggest that van der Waals forces van der Waals forces: see intermolecular forces.
van der Waals forces

Relatively weak electrical forces that attract neutral (uncharged) molecules to each other in gases, liquefied and solidified gases, and almost all organic liquids and solids.
, which lubricate lu·bri·cate  
v. lu·bri·cat·ed, lu·bri·cat·ing, lu·bri·cates

v.tr.
1. To apply a lubricant to.

2. To make slippery or smooth.

v.intr.
To act as a lubricant.
 graphite sheets, also operate between the layers of multiwall carbon nanotubes. The forces, which would snap wayward tubes back inside, also would permit nearly perfect bearinglike movement, they say. Although Cumings wasn't able to test rotation of one tube within another, he believes an extended section should easily turn about its long axis, and he hopes to prove it soon.

Cumings extended and retracted layers on several nanotubes 10 to 20 times each. The nanotubes that Cumings manipulated show no signs of wear and tear under nanoscale magnification, he and Zettl report.

"This is really like molecular perfection," Cumings says. When developers incorporate parts onto a microchip--or potentially a nanochip--they want them to last. "It's like having an automobile that you know you can t take into the shop," he says.

Building up a "nanotechnology toolbox" is an active area of research, says Superfine. "We're trying to develop and understand the fundamental elements that go into any kind of nanomachine, whether it's bearings or springs or gears," he adds.

The next challenge will be to integrate components, such as the one that Cumings found, into functional devices, Superfine says.

"That's going to be the next fun part," he says. "I think over the next couple years, what you'll start seeing is people assembling devices by hand. The next step [after that] ... is going to be understanding how you can set up a process where you can make 10,000 of these or so on a chip."

"I think that the report of Cumings and Zettl will send shock waves in the nanoscience community, and even larger," adds Laszlo Forro, of the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne in Switzerland. "It will open new avenues."
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Article Details
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Author:Gorman, J.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Jul 29, 2000
Words:514
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