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Knitting with nanotubes. (Materials Science).


As if pulling threads from a silkworm's cocoon cocoon: see pupa. , researchers in China have drawn fine yarns of carbon nanotubes from a reservoir of the microscopic carbon cylinders.

The resulting 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.  yarns, which can reach lengths of more than 30 centimeters, might eventually be woven into super-strong materials such as bullet-stopping fabrics, suggest Kaili Jiang, Qunqing Li, and Shoushan Fan of the Nanotechnology Research Center This article or section contains information about a building currently under construction.
It may contain information of a speculative nature, and the content may change dramatically as construction progresses and new information becomes available.
 at Tsinghua University Coordinates:  History
Tsinghua University was established in Beijing in 1911 on the site of a former royal garden belonging to a prince, and was funded by an indemnity which
 in Beijing. Carbon nanotubes are hollow tubes of carbon atoms just nanometers in diameter. Despite their size, they're incredibly strong, and they hold promise for future generations of microelectronic chips.

The scientists stumbled upon their discovery while trying to pull nanotubes from an array. Instead of removing a bundle, the researchers reeled out a continuous length of nanotube yarn. The component threads are each several hundred nanometers wide. Weak forces called van der Waals interactions hold the threads together end-to-end.

The researchers suggest in the Oct. 24 Nature that a carbon nanotube array just 1 square centimeter centimeter (sĕn`tĭmē'tər), abbr. cm, unit of length equal to 0.01 meter, the basic unit of length in the metric system. The centimeter is the unit of length in the cgs system. It is approximately equal to 0.  in area can make about 10 meters of yarn.

Unlike other methods of making threads from nanotubes, the new one doesn't require a solvent or some other additive, so the yarn contains pure nanotubes, and after heating, may maintain its superlative mechanical, thermal, and electrical properties, the researchers say (SN: 12/16/00, p. 398). In one experiment, the researchers formed the yarn into a lightbulb filament filament, in astronomy: see chromosphere.  and found that its strength and conductivity increased after it heated up.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:9CHIN
Date:Nov 2, 2002
Words:242
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